Applications of Steganography
Applications of Steganography
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Steganography is applicable to, but not limited to, the following areas.
The area differs in what feature of the steganography is utilized in each system.
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In practice, when you use some steganography, you must first select a vessel data
according to the size of the embedding data. The vessel should be innocuous. Then,
you embed the confidential data by using an embedding program (which is one
component of the steganography software) together with some key. When extracting,
you (or your party) use an extracting program (another component) to recover the
embedded data by the same key ( "common key" in terms of cryptography). In this
case you need a "key negotiation" before you start communication.
Attaching a stego file to an e-mail message is the simplest example in this application
area. But you and your party must do a "sending-and-receiving" action that could be
noticed by a third party. So, e-mailing is not a completely secret communication
method.
There is some other communication method that uses the Internet Webpage. In this
method you don't need to send anything to your party, and no one can detect your
communication. This method is shown in the other page.
Each secrecy based application needs an embedding process which leaves the smallest
embedding evidence. You may follow the following.
(A) Choose a large vessel, larger the better, compared with the embedding data.
(B) Discard the original vessel after embedding.
For example, in the case of Qtech Hide & View, it leaves some latent embedding
evidence even if the vessel has a very large embedding capacity. You are
recommended to embed only 25% or less (for PNG / BMP output) of the maximum
capacity, or only 3% of the vessel size (for JPEG output)..
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We take advantage of the fragility of the embedded data in this application area.
We asserted in the Home Page that "the embedded data can rather be fragile than be
very robust." Actually, embedded data are fragile in most steganography programs.
Especially, Qtech Hide & View program embeds data in an extremely fragile manner.
We demonstrate this in the other page.
In this area embedded data is "hidden", but is "explained" to publicize the content.
Today, digital contents are getting more and more commonly distributed by Internet
than ever before. For example, music companies release new albums on their
Webpage in a free or charged manner. However, in this case, all the contents are
equally distributed to the people who accessed the page. So, an ordinary Web
distribution scheme is not suited for a "case-by-case" and "selective" distribution. Of
course it is always possible to attach digital content to e-mail messages and send to
the customers. But it will takes a lot of cost in time and labor.
If you have some valuable content, which you think it is okay to provide others if they
really need it, and if it is possible to upload such content on the Web in some covert
manner. And if you can issue a special "access key" to extract the content selectively,
you will be very happy about it. A steganographic scheme can help realize a this type
of system.
(1) A content owner classify his/her digital contents in a folder-by-folder manner, and
embed the whole folders in some large vessel according to a steganographic method
using folder access keys, and upload the embedded vessel (stego data) on his/her own
Webpage.
(2) On that Webpage the owner explains the contents in depth and publicize
worldwide. The contact information to the owner (post mail address, e-mail address,
phone number, etc.) will be posted there.
(3) The owner may receive an access-request from a customer who watched that
Webpage. In that case, the owner may (or may not) creates an access key and provide
it to the customer (free or charged)..
In this mechanism the most important point is, a "
" is possible or
not.
Media data (photo picture, movie, music, etc.) have some association with other
information. A photo picture, for instance, may have the following.
(1) The title of the picture and some physical object information
(2) The date and the time when the picture was taken
(3) The camera and the photographer's information
Formerly, these are annotated beside the each picture in the album.
Recently, almost all cameras are digitalized. They are cheap in price, easy to use,
quick to shoot. They eventually made people feel reluctant to work on annotating each
picture. Now, most home PC's are stuck with the huge amount of photo files. In this
situation it is very hard to find a specific shot in the piles of pictures. A "photo album
software" may help a little. You can sort the pictures and put a couple of annotation
words to each photo. When you want to find a specific picture, you can make a search
by keywords for the target picture. However, the annotation data in such software are
not unified with the target pictures. Each annotation only has a link to the picture.
Therefore, when you transfer the pictures to a different album software, all the
annotation data are lost.
Steganography can solve this problem because a steganography program unifies two
types of data into one by way of embedding operation. So, metadata can easily be
transferred from one system to another without hitch. Specifically, you can embed all
your good/bad memory (of your sight-seeing trip) in each snap shot of the digital
photo. You can either send the embedded picture to your friend to extract your
memory on his/her PC, or you may keep it silent in your own PC to enjoy extracting
the memory ten years after. ± !"# may be a good program for
such purposes.
If a "motion picture steganography system" has been developed in the near future, a
keyword based movie-scene retrieving system will be implemented. It will be a step to
a "semantic movie retrieval system."
We have exemplified four steganography-applicable areas, and provided some
technical information.
References
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(Updated: Aug. 21, 2009 by Eiji Kawaguchi)