With the mushroom growth of state-of-the-art digital image and video manipulations tools, establishing the authenticity of multimedia content has become a challenging issue. Digital image forensics is an increasingly growing research field that symbolises a never ending struggle against forgery and tampering. This survey attempts to cover the blind techniques that have been proposed for exposing forgeries. This work dwells on the detection techniques for three of the most common forgery types, namely copy/move, splicing and retouching.
The importance and relevance of digital-image forensics has attracted researchers to establish different techniques for creating and detecting forgeries. The core category in passive image forgery is copy–move image forgery that affects the originality of image by applying a different transformation. In this paper, a frequency-domain image-manipulation method is presented. The method exploits the localized nature of discrete wavelet transform (DWT) to attain the region of the host image to be manipulated. Both patch and host image are subjected to DWT at the same level l to obtain 3l+1 sub-bands, and each sub-band of the patch is pasted to the identified region in the corresponding sub-band of the host image. Resulting manipulated host sub-bands are then subjected to inverse DWT to obtain the final manipulated host image. The proposed method shows good resistance against detection by two frequency-domain forgery detection methods from the literature. The purpose of this research work is to create a forgery and highlight the need to produce forgery detection methods that are robust against malicious copy–move forgery.
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