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Forensic Authentication of Data Bearing Halftones
Stephen Pollard
1
, Robert Ulichney
2
, Matthew Gaubatz
3
and
4
Steven Simske
1
Hewlett Packard Labs, Bristol, U.K.
2
Hewlett Packard Labs, Andover, Massachusetts, U.S.A.
3
Hewlett Packard Labs, Bellevue, Washington, U.S.A.
4
Hewlett Packard Labs, Fort Collins, Colorado, U.S.A.
Keywords: Forensic Printing, Stegatones, Image Registration, Gabor Filters, Biometrics.
Abstract: This paper introduces a practical system for combining overt, covert and forensic information in a single,
small printed feature. The overt “carrier” feature need not be a dedicated security mark such as a 2D or
color barcode, but can instead be integrated into a desirable object such as a logo as part of the aesthetically-
desired layout using steganographic halftones (Stegatones). High-resolution imaging in combination with
highly accurate and robust image registration is used to recover, simultaneously, a unique identity suitable
for associating a unique print with an on-line database and a unique forensic signature that is both tamper
and copy sensitive.
1 INTRODUCTION
Counterfeiting, warranty fraud, product tampering,
smuggling, product diversion and other forms of
organized deception are driving the need for
improved brand protection. The potential for
security printing and imaging to provide an
extremely cost-effective forensic level of
authentication is well-recognized (Pizzanelli, 2009).
There are also a number of instances in which
embedding data in hard copy is desired, but overt
marks such as bar codes would damage the
aesthetics of the document. The novel method,
outlined in this paper, simultaneously addresses both
of these needs by combining forensics and
steganographic halftoning (Ulichney et al., 2010) on
the same printed object, and describes a system for
both encoding and decoding such objects.
In order to perform a forensic authentication of
printed material, it is necessary use an image
resolution sufficient to expose unique properties of
the print that are extremely difficult, if not
impossible on a regular paper substrate, to reproduce
or copy (Pollard et al., 2010). For the majority of
printing technologies, these properties result
naturally from the stochastic nature of the print
process itself and its interaction with the underlying
structural properties of the substrate material on
which ink is printed. As such they represent a unique
fingerprint that can be used to authenticate
individually printed items such as labels, documents,
product packaging and monetary notes.
Previously (Pollard et al., 2012) a method
derived from iris recognition (Daugman, 1993) has
been used to derive a general area-based print
signature that can be applied to halftones images and
thus affords general utility and applicability for
forensic print authentication. Here that idea is
extended to show that the methodology developed
for regular halftones is applicable to steganographic
halftone, or Stegatone, images where the content of
the original halftone has been modulated, in a
manner unknown to the decoding system, to carry
extra covert information. Most importantly, the
image alignment strategy on which the method is
founded is not disrupted by the introduction of
unknown deformations in the printed material.
Furthermore, despite the small extent of the
stegatones used in our experiments (4mm on a side),
they are able to encode sufficient bit data to be a
practical alternative overt 2D barcode alternatives
such as Data Matrix or QR-Codes.
2 METHOD
The Stegatone encoding system outlined in Figure 1
allows the creation of a secure hardcopy document
with an embedded payload along with the filing of
its forensic signature in a registry located on a
109
Pollard S., Ulichney R., Gaubatz M. and Simske S..
Forensic Authentication of Data Bearing Halftones.
DOI: 10.5220/0004296201090113
In Proceedings of the International Conference on Computer Vision Theory and Applications (VISAPP-2013), pages 109-113
ISBN: 978-989-8565-48-8
Copyright
c
2013 SCITEPRESS (Science and Technology Publications, Lda.)