It is shown that the watermarking algorithm presented in the above paper [1] can be easily discredited and ipso facto cannot be used for protecting rightful ownership.Index Terms-Rightful ownership, singular value decomposition, watermarking.
In this paper, a new quaternion-based lossless encryption technique for digital image and communication on medicine (DICOM) images is proposed. We have scrutinized and slightly modified the concept of the DICOM network to point out the best location for the proposed encryption scheme, which significantly improves speed of DICOM images encryption in comparison with those originally embedded into DICOM advanced encryption standard and triple data encryption standard algorithms. The proposed algorithm decomposes a DICOM image into two 8-bit gray-tone images in order to perform encryption. The algorithm implements Feistel network like the scheme proposed by Sastry and Kumar. It uses special properties of quaternions to perform rotations of data sequences in 3D space for each of the cipher rounds. The images are written as Lipschitz quaternions, and modular arithmetic was implemented for operations with the quaternions. A computer-based analysis has been carried out, and the obtained results are shown at the end of this paper.
In this paper, a novel reversible data hiding method for encrypted images (RDHEI) is proposed. An efficient coding scheme based on cyclic binary Golay (23, 12) code is designed to embed additional data into the least significant bits (LSBs) of the encrypted image. The most significant bits (MSBs) are used to ensure the reversibility of the embedding process. The proposed scheme is lossless, and based on the receiver's privileges, allows recovery of marked data, original data and embedded data. Furthermore, the scheme can be used with any type of data, however it is best suited to 16-bit DICOM images of monochrome photometric interpretation. A modification to the standard DICOM network model was also introduced, to point out an example application of the proposed RDHEI method, i.e. an anonymized data storage outsourcing. A computer-based analysis has been carried out and simulation results are shown at the end of this paper.
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