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Information Hiding

6th International Workshop, IH 2004, Toronto, Canada, May 23-25, 2004, Revised Selected Papers

  • Conference proceedings
  • © 2005

Overview

Part of the book series: Lecture Notes in Computer Science (LNCS, volume 3200)

Included in the following conference series:

Conference proceedings info: IH 2004.

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Table of contents (25 papers)

  1. Session 1 - Digital Media Watermarking Session Chair: Lisa Marvel (University of Delaware)

  2. Session 2 - Steganalysis Session Chair: Mauro Barni (University of Siena)

  3. Session 3 - Forensic Applications Session Chair: Scott Craver (Princeton University)

  4. Session 4 - Steganography Session Chair: Andreas Westfeld (Dresden University of Technology)

  5. Session 5 - Software Watermarking Session Chair: John McHugh (SEI/CERT)

  6. Session 6 - Security and Privacy Session Chair: Ross Anderson (University of Cambridge)

Other volumes

  1. Information Hiding

Keywords

About this book

It is an honor and great pleasure to write a preface for this postproceedings of the 6th International Workshop on Information Hiding. In the past 10 years, the field of data hiding has been maturing and expanding, gradually establishing its place as an active interdisciplinary research area uniquely combining information theory, cryptology, and signal processing. This year, the workshop was followed by the Privacy Enhancing Technologies workshop (PET) hosted at the same location. Delegates viewed this connection as fruitful as it gave both communities a convenient opportunity to interact. We would like to thank all authors who submitted their work for consideration. Out of the 70 submisions received by the program committee, 25 papers were accepted for publication based on their novelty, originality, and scientific merit. We strived to achieve a balanced exposition of papers that would represent many different aspects of information hiding. All papers were divided into eight sessions: digital media watermarking, steganalysis, digital forensics, steganography, software watermarking, security and privacy, anonymity, and data hiding in unusual content. This year, the workshop included a one-hour rump session that offered an opportunity to the delegates to share their work in progress and other brief but interesting contributions.

Editors and Affiliations

  • Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Binghamton University, BINGHAMTON

    Jessica Fridrich

Bibliographic Information

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