513 research outputs found

    Side-Information For Steganography Design And Detection

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    Today, the most secure steganographic schemes for digital images embed secret messages while minimizing a distortion function that describes the local complexity of the content. Distortion functions are heuristically designed to predict the modeling error, or in other words, how difficult it would be to detect a single change to the original image in any given area. This dissertation investigates how both the design and detection of such content-adaptive schemes can be improved with the use of side-information. We distinguish two types of side-information, public and private: Public side-information is available to the sender and at least in part also to anybody else who can observe the communication. Content complexity is a typical example of public side-information. While it is commonly used for steganography, it can also be used for detection. In this work, we propose a modification to the rich-model style feature sets in both spatial and JPEG domain to inform such feature sets of the content complexity. Private side-information is available only to the sender. The previous use of private side-information in steganography was very successful but limited to steganography in JPEG images. Also, the constructions were based on heuristic with little theoretical foundations. This work tries to remedy this deficiency by introducing a scheme that generalizes the previous approach to an arbitrary domain. We also put forward a theoretical investigation of how to incorporate side-information based on a model of images. Third, we propose to use a novel type of side-information in the form of multiple exposures for JPEG steganography

    Side-Informed Steganography for JPEG Images by Modeling Decompressed Images

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    Side-informed steganography has always been among the most secure approaches in the field. However, a majority of existing methods for JPEG images use the side information, here the rounding error, in a heuristic way. For the first time, we show that the usefulness of the rounding error comes from its covariance with the embedding changes. Unfortunately, this covariance between continuous and discrete variables is not analytically available. An estimate of the covariance is proposed, which allows to model steganography as a change in the variance of DCT coefficients. Since steganalysis today is best performed in the spatial domain, we derive a likelihood ratio test to preserve a model of a decompressed JPEG image. The proposed method then bounds the power of this test by minimizing the Kullback-Leibler divergence between the cover and stego distributions. We experimentally demonstrate in two popular datasets that it achieves state-of-the-art performance against deep learning detectors. Moreover, by considering a different pixel variance estimator for images compressed with Quality Factor 100, even greater improvements are obtained.Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information Forensics & Securit

    Hunting wild stego images, a domain adaptation problem in digital image forensics

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    Digital image forensics is a field encompassing camera identication, forgery detection and steganalysis. Statistical modeling and machine learning have been successfully applied in the academic community of this maturing field. Still, large gaps exist between academic results and applications used by practicing forensic analysts, especially when the target samples are drawn from a different population than the data in a reference database. This thesis contains four published papers aiming at narrowing this gap in three different fields: mobile stego app detection, digital image steganalysis and camera identification. It is the first work to explore a way of extending the academic methods to real world images created by apps. New ideas and methods are developed for target images with very rich flexibility in the embedding rates, embedding algorithms, exposure settings and camera sources. The experimental results proved that the proposed methods work very well, even for the devices which are not included in the reference database

    Advances in Syndrome Coding based on Stochastic and Deterministic Matrices for Steganography

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    Steganographie ist die Kunst der vertraulichen Kommunikation. Anders als in der Kryptographie, wo der Austausch vertraulicher Daten für Dritte offensichtlich ist, werden die vertraulichen Daten in einem steganographischen System in andere, unauffällige Coverdaten (z.B. Bilder) eingebettet und so an den Empfänger übertragen. Ziel eines steganographischen Algorithmus ist es, die Coverdaten nur geringfügig zu ändern, um deren statistische Merkmale zu erhalten, und möglichst in unauffälligen Teilen des Covers einzubetten. Um dieses Ziel zu erreichen, werden verschiedene Ansätze der so genannten minimum-embedding-impact Steganographie basierend auf Syndromkodierung vorgestellt. Es wird dabei zwischen Ansätzen basierend auf stochastischen und auf deterministischen Matrizen unterschieden. Anschließend werden die Algorithmen bewertet, um Vorteile der Anwendung von Syndromkodierung herauszustellen

    The role of side information in steganography

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    Das Ziel digitaler Steganographie ist es, eine geheime Kommunikation in digitalen Medien zu verstecken. Der übliche Ansatz ist es, die Nachricht in einem empirischen Trägermedium zu verstecken. In dieser Arbeit definieren wir den Begriff der Steganographischen Seiteninformation (SSI). Diese Definition umfasst alle wichtigen Eigenschaften von SSI. Wir begründen die Definition informationstheoretisch und erklären den Einsatz von SSI. Alle neueren steganographischen Algorithmen nutzen SSI um die Nachricht einzubetten. Wir entwickeln einen Angriff auf adaptive Steganographie und zeigen anhand von weit verbreiteten SSI-Varianten, dass unser Angriff funktioniert. Wir folgern, dass adaptive Steganographie spieltheoretisch beschrieben werden muss. Wir entwickeln ein spieltheoretisches Modell für solch ein System und berechnen die spieltheoretisch optimalen Strategien. Wir schlussfolgern, dass ein Steganograph diesen Strategien folgen sollte. Zudem entwickeln wir eine neue spieltheoretisch optimale Strategie zur Einbettung, die sogenannten Ausgleichseinbettungsstrategien.The  goal of digital steganography is to hide a secret communication in digital media. The common approach in steganography is to hide the secret messages in empirical cover objects. We are the first to define Steganographic Side Information (SSI). Our definition of SSI captures all relevant properties of SSI. We explain the common usage of SSI. All recent steganographic schemes use SSI to identify suitable areas fot the embedding change. We develop a targeted attack on four widely used variants of SSI, and show that our attack detects them almost perfectly. We argue that the steganographic competition must be framed with means of game theory. We present a game-theoretical framework that captures all relevant properties of such a steganographic system. We instantiate the framework with five different models and solve each of these models for game-theoretically optimal strategies. Inspired by our solutions, we give a new paradigm for secure adaptive steganography, the so-called equalizer embedding strategies

    Deep learning is a good steganalysis tool when embedding key is reused for different images, even if there is a cover source-mismatch

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    International audienceSince the BOSS competition, in 2010, most steganalysis approaches use a learning methodology involving two steps: feature extraction, such as the Rich Models (RM), for the image representation, and use of the Ensemble Classifier (EC) for the learning step. In 2015, Qian et al. have shown that the use of a deep learning approach that jointly learns and computes the features, was very promising for the steganalysis.In this paper, we follow-up the study of Qian et al., and show that in the scenario where the steganograph always uses the same embedding key for embedding with the simulator in the different images, due to intrinsic joint minimization and the preservation of spatial information, the results obtained from a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) or a Fully Connected Neural Network (FNN), if well parameterized, surpass the conventional use of a RM with an EC.First, numerous experiments were conducted in order to find the best "shape" of the CNN. Second, experiments were carried out in the clairvoyant scenario in order to compare the CNN and FNN to an RM with an EC. The results show more than 16% reduction in the classification error with our CNN or FNN. Third, experiments were also performed in a cover-source mismatch setting. The results show that the CNN and FNN are naturally robust to the mismatch problem.In Addition to the experiments, we provide discussions on the internal mechanisms of a CNN, and weave links with some previously stated ideas, in order to understand the results we obtained. We also have a discussion on the scenario "same embedding key"
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