Patents Represented by Attorney, Agent or Law Firm Steven W. Stewart
  • Patent number: 6804377
    Abstract: The present invention relates to detecting steganographically hiding images and information. In a preferred embodiment, an image is hidden within a media signal. The media preferably includes a cyan (C) color plane, a magenta (M) color plane, a yellow (Y) color plane and a black (K) color plane. In an alternative embodiment, the media includes a spot color. The image is converted into a black color channel image and is then applied to the media's K channel. The black channel image is inverted and the inverted image is applied to the media's CMY (or spot) color planes. For detection, the embedded media is illuminated with infrared light, which emphasizes the black color plane. An input device captures a digital image of the illuminated media. The image is detected or displayed based on the emphasized black plane.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 2, 2002
    Date of Patent: October 12, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Alastair M. Reed, Trent J. Brundage, Jeremy Cattone
  • Patent number: 6754377
    Abstract: Line structures are provided for printed documents to encode plural-bit digital information. The encoded information can be decoded using suitably-equipped processing equipment and used to identify the printed documents. In one implementation the information is repeated differently in a two dimensional pattern of line structures according to a key.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 6, 2002
    Date of Patent: June 22, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventor: Geoffrey B. Rhoads
  • Patent number: 6744906
    Abstract: Two or more digital watermarks, with different characteristics, are embedded in a document. The characteristics are chosen so that the watermarks will be affected in different manners if the document is subsequently copied or reproduced. The detection process or mechanism reads two or more of the watermarks and compares their characteristics. While wear and handling may change the characteristics of the digital watermarks in a document, the relationship between the characteristics of the multiple digital watermarks in a document will nevertheless give an indication as to whether a document is an original or a copy of an original. Document wear can be independently assessed and used as an aid in interpreting the detected watermark characteristics.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 7, 2001
    Date of Patent: June 1, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Geoffrey B. Rhoads, Ammon E. Gustafson
  • Patent number: 6728390
    Abstract: Two or more digital watermarks, with different characteristics, are embedded in a document. The characteristics are chosen so that the watermarks will be affected in different manners if the document is subsequently copied or reproduced. The detection process or mechanism reads two or more of the watermarks and compares their characteristics. While wear and handling may change the characteristics of the digital watermarks in a document, the relationship between the characteristics of the multiple digital watermarks in a document will nevertheless give an indication as to whether a document is an original or a copy of an original. Document wear can be independently assessed and used as an aid in interpreting the detected watermark characteristics.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 7, 2001
    Date of Patent: April 27, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Geoffrey B. Rhoads, Ammon E. Gustafson
  • Patent number: 6721440
    Abstract: The present invention relates to digital watermarks. In a preferred embodiment, a media signal is embedded with a digital watermark component. The media signal includes a cyan color plane, a magenta color plane, a yellow color plane, and a black plane. The digital watermark component is embedded in the cyan, magenta, and yellow color planes. The digital watermark component is inverted, and embedded in the black color plane. The resulting watermark is fragile, since signal processing techniques that combine the color planes with the black color plane effectively cancels the watermark signal in local areas. The inventive watermark also includes low-visibility properties, by canceling perceived luminance change in local areas throughout the media signal. In another embodiment, a watermark signal is embedded in a first color scheme to be out-of-color gamut in a second color scheme.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: July 2, 2001
    Date of Patent: April 13, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Alastair M. Reed, Brett A. Bradley
  • Patent number: 6718046
    Abstract: Media is embedded with an out-of-phase digital watermark. A first component of the digital watermark is printed using a first ultraviolet (UV) ink. The first UV ink includes a first fluorescence decay time. The second digital watermark component is inverted with respect to the first component and is printed using a second UV ink. The second ink includes a second fluorescence decay time, which is longer than the first decay time. The embedded media is illuminated with a UV pulse. The watermark is detected after the first emission decay time, but before the second emission decay time. The watermark is fragile under steady-state UV illumination since the inverted watermark component cancels the non-inverted component.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 31, 2001
    Date of Patent: April 6, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Alastair M. Reed, Lou H. Berkley, Jr.
  • Patent number: 6694043
    Abstract: By printing documents and other objects with machine readable indicia, such as steganographic digital watermarks or barcodes, a great variety of document management functions can be enabled. The indicia can be added as part of the printing process (after document data has been output by an originating application program), such as by printer driver software, by a Postscript engine in a printer, etc. The indicia can encode data about the document, or can encode an identifier that references a database record containing such data. By showing the printed document to a computer device with a suitable optical input device (e.g., a webcam), an electronic version of the document can be recalled for editing, or other responsive action can be taken.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 8, 2002
    Date of Patent: February 17, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Phillip Andrew Seder, J. Scott Carr, Burt W. Perry, Geoffrey B. Rhoads
  • Patent number: 6694042
    Abstract: By printing documents and other objects with machine readable indicia, such as steganographic digital watermarks or barcodes, a great variety of document management functions can be enabled. The indicia can be added as part of the printing process (after document data has been output by an originating application program), such as by printer driver software, by a Postscript engine in a printer, etc. The indicia can encode data about the document, or can encode an identifier that references a database record containing such data. By showing the printed document to a computer device with a suitable optical input device (e.g., a webcam), an electronic version of the document can be recalled for editing, or other responsive action can be taken.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 8, 2002
    Date of Patent: February 17, 2004
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Phillip Andrew Seder, J. Scott Carr, Burt W. Perry, Geoffrey B. Rhoads
  • Patent number: 6664976
    Abstract: Digital watermarking technology is used in an image management system. Images are identified by digital watermarks. The images are stored so as to be indexed according to their unique identifiers. In the preferred embodiment, related images are grouped into a set of images through a common watermark identifier. A particular image within the set of images is identified through a hash of the particular image.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: March 13, 2002
    Date of Patent: December 16, 2003
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Neil E. Lofgren, Geoffrey B. Rhoads
  • Patent number: 6608911
    Abstract: The present invention relates to digital watermarks integrated into holograms, watermarked hologram structures, and related applications as an authentication technique. One method creates a watermark image, and then embeds the watermark image into a holographic structure. The holographic structure is carried by a smart card. The smart card includes additional information. In one embodiment, the digital watermark includes information bits, and these information bits are used to authenticate the hologram, or the smart card. In another embodiment, the watermark's information bits are compared with the additional information carried by the smart card. The result of the comparison is used to authenticate the smart card or the hologram.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 6, 2001
    Date of Patent: August 19, 2003
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Neil Lofgren, Stephen K. Decker, Hugh L. Brunk, J. Scott Carr
  • Patent number: 6577746
    Abstract: OLE-like principles are implemented using watermark data in digital objects in order to effect object linking or embedding. In one embodiment, a photocopier scans an original paper document to produce image data. This image data is analyzed for the presence of watermark data identifying a graphic on the document. With this watermark identifier, the photocopier can query a remote image database for pristine image data corresponding to the scanned graphic. This pristine data can be relayed from the remote database to the photocopier and substituted into the scanned image data. Output printed from the photocopier is thus based, at least in part, on pristine image data, rather than on image data that has been subjected to various corruption mechanisms (e.g., degradation of the original paper document, artifacts due to scanning, etc.). A “photocopy” better than the “original” can thereby be achieved.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: December 28, 1999
    Date of Patent: June 10, 2003
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Douglas B. Evans, William Y. Conwell
  • Patent number: 6522770
    Abstract: By printing documents and other objects with machine readable indicia, such as steganographic digital watermarks or barcodes, a great variety of document management functions can be enabled. The indicia can be added as part of the printing process (after document data has been output by an originating application program), such as by printer driver software, by a Postscript engine in a printer, etc. The indicia can encode data about the document, or can encode an identifier that references a database record containing such data. By showing the printed document to a computer device with a suitable optical input device (e.g., a webcam), an electronic version of the document can be recalled for editing, or other responsive action can be taken.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: August 1, 2000
    Date of Patent: February 18, 2003
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Phillip Andrew Seder, J. Scott Carr, Burt W. Perry, Stanley E. Graham, Geoffrey B. Rhoads
  • Patent number: 6449377
    Abstract: Line art on banknotes and the like is subtly altered to steganographically encode plural-bit digital information. For example, the lines' widths or spacings can be locally changed so as to slightly modulate the apparent luminance of the document. The encoded information can be decoded using suitably-equipped processing equipment and used to identify a document as a banknote. Various anti-counterfeiting actions can then be taken.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: May 6, 1998
    Date of Patent: September 10, 2002
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventor: Geoffrey B. Rhoads
  • Patent number: 6442284
    Abstract: The present invention detects the presence of a watermark in-an image by using a multi-step process. First, the image is examined to determine which regions of the image have characteristics such that there is a high probability that a watermark signal can be detected in that region of the image. Next the regions that have a high probability that a watermark can be detected (in contrast to all regions of the image) are examined to find watermark data. In order to determine the probability of finding watermark data in a particular region of an image, the amount of “variance” in the intensity of the pixels in the region is first examined. For example a region that is entirely white or entirely black has zero variance in luminance. Such a region can not carry watermark data, hence regions with zero or low variance can be eliminated from further processing.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: April 30, 1999
    Date of Patent: August 27, 2002
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventors: Ammon Gustafson, Geoffrey Rhoads, Adnan V. Alattar, Ravi K. Sharma, Clay Davidson
  • Patent number: 6411725
    Abstract: Watermarks in video signals or the accompanying audio track are used to associate video objects in a video sequence with object specific actions or information. A video object refers to a spatial and temporal portion of a video signal that depicts a recognizable object, such as a character, prop, graphic, etc. Each frame of a video signal may have one or more video objects. The auxiliary information is embedded in video or audio signals using “steganographic” methods, such as digital watermarks. By encoding object specific information into video or an accompanying audio track, the watermarks transform video objects into “watermark enabled” video objects that provide information, actions or links to additional information or actions during playback of a video or audio-visual program. A similar concept may be applied to audio objects, i.e. portions of audio that are attributable to a particular speaker, character, instrument, artist, etc.
    Type: Grant
    Filed: June 20, 2000
    Date of Patent: June 25, 2002
    Assignee: Digimarc Corporation
    Inventor: Geoffrey B. Rhoads