Digital Watermarking Task
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A Digital Watermarking Task is a annotation task that places a digital watermark in a data item.
- Context:
- It can be solved by a Watermarking System (that implements a watermaking algorithm).
- See: Lossless Compression.
References
2018
- (Wikipedia, 2018) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watermark_(disambiguation) Retrieved:2018-5-11.
- A watermark is a recognizable image or pattern in paper used to determine authenticity.
Watermark or watermarking may also refer to:
- Digital watermarking, a technique to embed data in digital audio, images or video
- Audio watermark, techniques for embedding hidden information into audio signals
- Watermark (data file), a method for ensuring data integrity which combines aspects of data hashing and digital watermarking
- Watermark (data synchronization), directory synchronization related programming terminology
- High-water mark (computer security), network security terminology
- Watermarking attack, an attack on disk encryption methods
- A watermark is a recognizable image or pattern in paper used to determine authenticity.
2002
- (Herley, 2002) ⇒ Cormac Herley. (2002). “Why Watermarking is Nonsense.” IEEE Signal Processing Magazine 19, no. 5
- ABSTRACT: The ease with which early watermarking algorithms were broken has given rise to a new set of schemes that are usually robust to a wide variety of attacks. We argue that this has created an illusion of progress, when in reality there is none. Most published watermarking algorithms, like their predecessors, protect all objects in a neighborhood surrounding the marked object. We point out that while this is necessary, it is very far from being sufficient. To withstand adversarial attack, a watermarking scheme would have to protect all valuable variations of an object, not merely ones that are close to it.