Beyond PRNU: Learning Robust Device-Specific Fingerprint for Source Camera Identification
Manisha, Chang-Tsun Li, Xufeng Lin, Karunakar A. Kotegar

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new robust device-specific fingerprint for source camera identification that overcomes PRNU limitations by being location-independent, resilient to manipulations, and effective for identifying individual cameras of the same model.
Contribution
The paper discovers a novel data-driven camera fingerprint that is location-independent, extracted from low and mid-frequency bands, and resilient to common image manipulations.
Findings
The new fingerprint is highly resilient to rotation, gamma correction, and JPEG compression.
It effectively identifies individual cameras of the same model.
The fingerprint overcomes spatial synchronization issues inherent in PRNU.
Abstract
Source camera identification tools assist image forensic investigators to associate an image in question with a suspect camera. Various techniques have been developed based on the analysis of the subtle traces left in the images during the acquisition. The Photo Response Non Uniformity (PRNU) noise pattern caused by sensor imperfections has been proven to be an effective way to identify the source camera. The existing literature suggests that the PRNU is the only fingerprint that is device-specific and capable of identifying the exact source device. However, the PRNU is susceptible to camera settings, image content, image processing operations, and counter-forensic attacks. A forensic investigator unaware of counter-forensic attacks or incidental image manipulations is at the risk of getting misled. The spatial synchronization requirement during the matching of two PRNUs also represents…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDigital Media Forensic Detection · Advanced Steganography and Watermarking Techniques · Law in Society and Culture
