1. Field of the Invention
This invention relates to a method for imprinting identification information (ED) into a digital content and for reading that information.
2. Background of the Related Art
The information superhighway was advocated in the United States in 1991, and since then distribution of information over networks as represented by the Internet has been forming a new society base. In this new network society, secure encryption and authentication are desired in such fields as electronic commerce because such fields are concerned with safety.
On the other hand, one of the principles of the Internet is the free distribution of digital contents such as pictures, animation and music (hereinafter collectively referred to as contents). Presently, even for valuable content, such as cultural works, illegal copies can be easily made and distributed. Collecting fees for using contents on the Internet, preventing illegal reproduction or modification, and protecting copyrights are serious problems that need to be addressed and solved. These issues are extremely important for the mutual development of a network society and culture.
It is therefore desired to design a general approach to trace illegal copies of digital contents.
The above references are incorporated by reference herein where appropriate for appropriate teachings of additional or alternative details, features and/or technical background.
An object of the invention is to solve at least the above problems and/or disadvantages and to provide at least the advantages described hereinafter.
Another object of this invention to provide an identification (ID) imprinting method applicable to existing contents.
It is a further object of this invention to provide an ID imprinting method applicable to a content having no reserved areas or areas for remarks that do not play any role in the content.
It is still another object of this invention to provide an ID imprinting method which does not introduce substantial degradation of the content quality when an ID information is imprinted.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide an ID imprinting method for embedding an ID information that can be easily detected.
It is yet another object of this invention to provide an ID readout method to easily detect and interpret the ID information imprinted in the content.
A method according to an embodiment of the present invention comprises loading a content into an information terminal where the content is used and imprinting an ID information associated to the information terminal or its user into a predetermined location in a perceivable portion of the loaded content. (A content may be any collection of digital data, and may be in the form of a sequence of data values. A perceivable portion contains data that play a role in the content, rather than reserved areas or areas for remarks that do not play any role in the content.)
The content is first loaded into an information terminal. Subsequently, an ID information is imprinted into a predetermined location of the content. A user who reproduces illegal copies of the content is identified with the ID information imprinted therein. Since the ID information is imprinted in a predetermined location, no string search is necessary. This method is applicable to existing contents, since it requires no special data blocks beforehand.
In another aspect of the invention, an ID information is imprinted in the form of spatial frequency information into the entire content loaded into an information terminal. “Spatial frequency information” is information relative to a spatial frequency in any sense. In this aspect, the ID information is converted into spatial frequency information via, for instance, an inverse orthogonal transformation so as to be reflected in the content data. The inverse orthogonal transformation may be an inverse fast Fourier transform (IFFT) or an inverse discrete cosine transform (CT). This method is also applicable to existing contents.
According to the ID reading process of this invention, a content is first obtained for instance via a network, and an ID information is read from a predetermined location thereof. The ID information is uniquely associated with an information terminal or its user. In another aspect, spatial frequency information is extracted from the obtained content, and then supplied for an orthogonal transformation. Through the transformation, the ID information imprinted in the content is restored. An orthogonal transformation may be a fast Fourier transform (FT), a discrete cosine transform (DCI), and so forth.
To achieve at least the above objects in a whole or in part, there is provided a method for distributing a digital content on a computer network that includes receiving via the computer network a request for a digital content from an information terminal, the request identifying the information terminal or a user thereof, obtaining an encoded version of the digital content, generating a decoding program such that ID information representing the information terminal or user is embedded therein, and wherein the decoding program is programmed to perform the function of decoding the encoded digital content at the information terminal to produce a decoded digital content having the ID information imprinted therein, transmitting via the computer network the decoding program to the information terminal, and transmitting via the computer network the encoded digital content to the information terminal in response to the request.
To further achieve at least the above objects in a whole or in part, there is provided a method for distributing a digital content on a computer network that includes receiving via the computer network a request for a digital content from an information terminal, the request identifying the information terminal or a user thereof, obtaining an encoded version of the digital content, generating a decoding program such that ID information representing the information terminal or user is embedded therein, and wherein the decoding program is programmed to perform the function of decoding the encoded digital content at the information terminal to produce a decoded digital content having the ID information imprinted therein without additional explicit ID verification being performed at the information terminal by the user thereof, transmitting via the computer network the decoding program to the information terminal, and transmitting via the computer network the encoded digital content to the information terminal in response to the request.
To further achieve at least the above objects in a whole or in part, there is provided a method for distributing digital content that includes receiving a request for digital content from an information terminal, obtaining an encoded version of the digital content, generating a decoding program that can concurrently decode the encoded digital content, read an identification code from the information terminal, and imprint the identification code on the digital content, sending the encoded digital content and the decoding program together to the information terminal, and concurrently decoding the encoded digital content, reading an identification code from the information terminal, and imprinting the identification code on the digital content at the information terminal.
Additional advantages, objects, and features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and in part will become apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned from practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained as particularly pointed out in the appended claims.
The invention will be described in detail with reference to the following drawings in which like reference numerals refer to like elements wherein:
The present invention may be applied to a network system comprising a server 2 and client devices connected on a network 9, as shown in
The server 2 supplies a content to the client devices so that ID imprinting is carried out on the client side. Here, as an example, the PC 4 is provided with an imprinting function.
The viewer 12 received in the PC 4 may now be used to decrypt and display the received content. As shown in
As a measure for preventing use of content before ID imprinting, for instance, a memory area in the PC 4 that stores a content without an ID imprinted therein is protected by the ID imprinter 18 so that reading of such a content is prevented. Specifically, the system is designed so as to be interrupted or reset if a read access is made to the memory area containing a content without an ID. Once an ID is imprinted, this protection is removed, enabling the image to be used as desired.
As shown in
In operation, the user of the PC 4 requests the server 2 run by the content manager to transmit a content. The content is encrypted on the server 2 and then sent with the viewer 12 to the PC 4 via a network. The communication section 10 of the PC 4 receives the transmitted content, and forwards it to the viewer 12, which has been received from the network. Within the viewer 12, the image decoder 14 decodes the content, and forwards it to the ID imprinter 18. The ID reader 30 in the ID imprinter 18 reads the ID from the ID holder 16 and supplies it to the combiner 34. The decoded image reader 32 reads the decoded image, and forwards it to the combiner 34. Having received the ID and the decoded image, the combiner 34 replaces the LSBs of the luminance in the aforementioned manner to thereby imprint the ID onto the image. The image having the ID is displayed on the display 24. The ID imprinted image may also be supplied to the memory 26. If a subsequent unauthorized attempt is made to modify or reproduce the ID-imprinted image stored in the memory 26, copies of such modified or reproduced image will carry the ID information imprinted in the image stored in the memory 26. It is therefore possible to identify the party making the unauthorized copies.
In this embodiment, the ID information is represented as a signal in the frequency domain. When imprinting such an ID, an inverse orthogonal transform is applied to the frequency signal representing the ID information to generate a bit pattern in the content domain, which is then imprinted in the digital content. In this specification, the term “content domain” is used to denote the domain representing the data in the digital content, while the term “frequency domain” is used to denote a mapping of the content domain through an orthogonal transform. When the content is a two-dimensional image (an example used in the illustration below), the content domain is a two-dimensional space domain, and the corresponding frequency domain is a two-dimensional spatial frequency domain. When the content is audio, the content domain may be a time domain and the frequency domain may be a one-dimensional frequency domain.
Specific embodiments of the present invention for imprinting ID information have been described. Many variations of the embodiments are possible, some of which are described below.
First, although a content is distributed via a network in the above-described embodiments, the content may also be distributed by storing it in a medium such as a CD-ROM or a floppy disc and loading it onto a PC. The embodiments described above are applicable to such other methods of content distribution.
Second, although a still image is used in the above-described embodiments as an example of a digital content, the methods may be applied to other types of digital content, such as motion images (e.g. video) or audio content. For audio content, the image decoder 14, the display controller 20, and the display 24 in
Third, an ID is not necessarily stored in the LSBs of a content. Any bits of quantified data may store the ID as long as the effects on the perceived quality of the content are insignificant. It should be noted that even perceptible imprinting may be employed as a visual watermark.
Fourth, although an ID is imprinted into a lower bit irrespective of upper bits in the aforementioned embodiment, an offset may be given to a lower bit such that the whole data including upper bits contains the ID.
Since this method can prevent direct exposure of an ID unlike imprinting it in the lower bits, security is increased. Another advantage is that data other than “0” and “1”, such as “2”, is also imprintable. Although modulo 3 arithmetic is mentioned here, modulo arithmetic based on other numbers may be used. Any other mathematical, boolean algebraic or cryptographic approach may be employed.
Fifth, in the aforementioned embodiments, the combiner 34 (
Sixth, in the embodiment shown in
Seventh, in the embodiment shown in
Eighth, although the ID information for one user is represented by one point in the frequency domain (
Ninth, in a frequency domain representation such as that shown in
Methods for imprinting ID information have been described. Methods for reading imprinted ID information will be described next.
If a content is illegally reproduced or modified (hereinafter referred to as an illegal action), it is desired that the unauthorized offender be identified. This can be achieved by reading the ID information imprinted into the content. A device for reading imprinted ID information (hereinafter referred to as a detector) may be provided anywhere in a network. A proxy server, for instance, may be equipped with such a detector.
In this embodiment, the ID reader 64 extracts information from a predetermined location, for instance, the LSBs at a leading part of a data sequence of the obtained content, and reconstructs the ID based on the extracted data. If this process does not result in any ID information that meaningfully identifies a user, then the content is judged to be original, i.e., having no user ID information imprinted. On the other hand, if a content with a user's ID imprinted therein is found on a network, the user identified by the imprinted ID may have illegally distributed the content. Based on the ID, the possible illegal action is traced.
The operation here is a reverse operation of that shown in FIGS. 6 to 8. The LSBs, which represent the imprinted ID information, are first extracted (
This method is advantageous in that it does not require comparing the suspect content and the original content in order to detect the ID.
The above-described methods for reading imprinted ID information may have many variations. Each variation of the ID imprinting method described earlier in this specification may have a corresponding variation of the ID reading method. For example, the ID can be read in cases where an offset has been added to a lower bit using a method such as the one described earlier with reference to
In addition, although the detector is connected to a network in the above embodiments, it may be an off-line, stand alone type if it checks only contents stored in storage media.
Moreover, in the described embodiments, the ID imprinting is carried out at the information terminals where the content is used, i.e. at the user end. It will be apparent to a skilled artisan, however, that the various methods described herein for imprinting ID information in a content are equally applicable to a content distribution scheme in which ID imprinting is carried out at the content provider end.
The foregoing embodiments and advantages are merely exemplary and are not to be construed as limiting the present invention. The present teaching can be readily applied to other types of apparatuses. The description of the present invention is intended to be illustrative, and not to limit the scope of the claims. Many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. In the claims, means-plus-function clauses are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function and not only structural equivalents but also equivalent structures.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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8-296830 | Nov 1996 | JP | national |
9-282468 | Sep 1997 | JP | national |
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/304,644, filed May 4, 1999, which is a continuation of PCT Application No. PCT/US97/20309, filed Nov. 6, 1997, which claimed priority from Japanese Patent Applications 8-296830, filed Nov. 8, 1996 and 9-282468, filed Sep. 9, 1997. Incorporation by reference of the entire disclosure of the prior applications are considered as being part of the disclosure of the accompanying application and is hereby incorporated by reference therein.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 09304644 | May 1999 | US |
Child | 11154874 | Jun 2005 | US |
Parent | PCT/US97/20309 | Nov 1997 | US |
Child | 09304644 | May 1999 | US |