3,568 research outputs found
An Effectual Hybrid Approach Using Data Encryption Standard (DES) and Secured Hash Algorithm (SHA) for Image Steganography
Today Security of data is of foremost importance in today’s world. Security has become one of the most important factor in communication and information technology. For this purpose steganography is used. Steganography is the art of hiding secret or sensitive information into digital media like images so as to have secure communication. In this paper we present and discuss LSB (Least Significant Bit) based image steganography with DES SHA algorithm so as to provide an extra layer of security
Efficient And Robust Video Steganography Algorithms For Secure Data Communication
Nowadays, the science of information hiding has gained tremendous significance due to advances in information and communication technology. The performance of any steganography method relies on the imperceptibility, embedding capacity, and robustness against attacks. This research provides solutions for the existing video steganography problems by proposing new and effective methods for digital video steganography. The key objectives of our paper are as follows: 1) a highly secure video steganography algorithm based on error correcting codes (ECC); 2) an increased payload video steganography algorithm in the discrete wavelet domain based on ECC; 3) a novel video steganography algorithm based on Kanade-Lucas-Tomasi (KLT) tracking and ECC; 4) a robust video steganography algorithm in the wavelet domain based on KLT tracking and ECC; and 5) a video steganography algorithm based on multiple object tracking and ECC. The experimental results from our research demonstrate that our proposed algorithms achieve higher embedding capacity as well as better imperceptibility of stego videos. Furthermore, the preprocessing stages increase the security and robustness of the proposed algorithms against attacks when compared to state-of-the-art steganographic methods
Perfectly Secure Steganography: Capacity, Error Exponents, and Code Constructions
An analysis of steganographic systems subject to the following perfect
undetectability condition is presented in this paper. Following embedding of
the message into the covertext, the resulting stegotext is required to have
exactly the same probability distribution as the covertext. Then no statistical
test can reliably detect the presence of the hidden message. We refer to such
steganographic schemes as perfectly secure. A few such schemes have been
proposed in recent literature, but they have vanishing rate. We prove that
communication performance can potentially be vastly improved; specifically, our
basic setup assumes independently and identically distributed (i.i.d.)
covertext, and we construct perfectly secure steganographic codes from public
watermarking codes using binning methods and randomized permutations of the
code. The permutation is a secret key shared between encoder and decoder. We
derive (positive) capacity and random-coding exponents for perfectly-secure
steganographic systems. The error exponents provide estimates of the code
length required to achieve a target low error probability. We address the
potential loss in communication performance due to the perfect-security
requirement. This loss is the same as the loss obtained under a weaker order-1
steganographic requirement that would just require matching of first-order
marginals of the covertext and stegotext distributions. Furthermore, no loss
occurs if the covertext distribution is uniform and the distortion metric is
cyclically symmetric; steganographic capacity is then achieved by randomized
linear codes. Our framework may also be useful for developing computationally
secure steganographic systems that have near-optimal communication performance.Comment: To appear in IEEE Trans. on Information Theory, June 2008; ignore
Version 2 as the file was corrupte
Perfectly Secure Steganography: Capacity, Error Exponents, and Code Constructions
An analysis of steganographic systems subject to the following perfect
undetectability condition is presented in this paper. Following embedding of
the message into the covertext, the resulting stegotext is required to have
exactly the same probability distribution as the covertext. Then no statistical
test can reliably detect the presence of the hidden message. We refer to such
steganographic schemes as perfectly secure. A few such schemes have been
proposed in recent literature, but they have vanishing rate. We prove that
communication performance can potentially be vastly improved; specifically, our
basic setup assumes independently and identically distributed (i.i.d.)
covertext, and we construct perfectly secure steganographic codes from public
watermarking codes using binning methods and randomized permutations of the
code. The permutation is a secret key shared between encoder and decoder. We
derive (positive) capacity and random-coding exponents for perfectly-secure
steganographic systems. The error exponents provide estimates of the code
length required to achieve a target low error probability. We address the
potential loss in communication performance due to the perfect-security
requirement. This loss is the same as the loss obtained under a weaker order-1
steganographic requirement that would just require matching of first-order
marginals of the covertext and stegotext distributions. Furthermore, no loss
occurs if the covertext distribution is uniform and the distortion metric is
cyclically symmetric; steganographic capacity is then achieved by randomized
linear codes. Our framework may also be useful for developing computationally
secure steganographic systems that have near-optimal communication performance.Comment: To appear in IEEE Trans. on Information Theory, June 2008; ignore
Version 2 as the file was corrupte
Perfectly Secure Steganography Using Minimum Entropy Coupling
Steganography is the practice of encoding secret information into innocuous
content in such a manner that an adversarial third party would not realize that
there is hidden meaning. While this problem has classically been studied in
security literature, recent advances in generative models have led to a shared
interest among security and machine learning researchers in developing scalable
steganography techniques. In this work, we show that a steganography procedure
is perfectly secure under Cachin (1998)'s information-theoretic model of
steganography if and only if it is induced by a coupling. Furthermore, we show
that, among perfectly secure procedures, a procedure maximizes information
throughput if and only if it is induced by a minimum entropy coupling. These
insights yield what are, to the best of our knowledge, the first steganography
algorithms to achieve perfect security guarantees for arbitrary covertext
distributions. To provide empirical validation, we compare a minimum entropy
coupling-based approach to three modern baselines -- arithmetic coding, Meteor,
and adaptive dynamic grouping -- using GPT-2, WaveRNN, and Image Transformer as
communication channels. We find that the minimum entropy coupling-based
approach achieves superior encoding efficiency, despite its stronger security
constraints. In aggregate, these results suggest that it may be natural to view
information-theoretic steganography through the lens of minimum entropy
coupling
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