Landscape More Secure Than Portrait? Zooming Into the Directionality of Digital Images With Security Implications

June 21, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› USENIX Security Symposium

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Authors Benedikt Lorch, Rainer BΓΆhme arXiv ID 2406.15206 Category cs.CR: Cryptography & Security Cross-listed cs.CV Citations 1 Venue USENIX Security Symposium Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
The orientation in which a source image is captured can affect the resulting security in downstream applications. One reason for this is that many state-of-the-art methods in media security assume that image statistics are similar in the horizontal and vertical directions, allowing them to reduce the number of features (or trainable weights) by merging coefficients. We show that this artificial symmetrization tends to suppress important properties of natural images and common processing operations, causing a loss of performance. We also observe the opposite problem, where unaddressed directionality causes learning-based methods to overfit to a single orientation. These are vulnerable to manipulation if an adversary chooses inputs with the less common orientation. This paper takes a comprehensive approach, identifies and systematizes causes of directionality at several stages of a typical acquisition pipeline, measures their effect, and demonstrates for three selected security applications (steganalysis, forensic source identification, and the detection of synthetic images) how the performance of state-of-the-art methods can be improved by properly accounting for directionality.
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