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Main Authors: Chaban, Roman, Pulfer, Brian, Voloshynovskiy, Slava
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.02575
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author Chaban, Roman
Pulfer, Brian
Voloshynovskiy, Slava
author_facet Chaban, Roman
Pulfer, Brian
Voloshynovskiy, Slava
contents This paper explores the potential of synthetic physical Copy Detection Patterns (CDP) to improve the robustness of anti-counterfeiting systems. By leveraging synthetic physical CDP, we aim at enhancing security and cost-effectiveness across various real-world applications. Our research demonstrates that synthetic CDP offer substantial improvements in authentication accuracy compared to one based on traditional digital templates. We conducted extensive tests using both a scanner and a diverse range of mobile phones, validating our approach through ROC analysis. The results indicate that synthetic CDP can reliably differentiate between original and fake samples, making this approach a viable solution for real-world applications, though requires an additional research to make this technology scalable across a variety of imaging devices.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2410_02575
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Assessing the Viability of Synthetic Physical Copy Detection Patterns on Different Imaging Systems
Chaban, Roman
Pulfer, Brian
Voloshynovskiy, Slava
Cryptography and Security
Information Theory
This paper explores the potential of synthetic physical Copy Detection Patterns (CDP) to improve the robustness of anti-counterfeiting systems. By leveraging synthetic physical CDP, we aim at enhancing security and cost-effectiveness across various real-world applications. Our research demonstrates that synthetic CDP offer substantial improvements in authentication accuracy compared to one based on traditional digital templates. We conducted extensive tests using both a scanner and a diverse range of mobile phones, validating our approach through ROC analysis. The results indicate that synthetic CDP can reliably differentiate between original and fake samples, making this approach a viable solution for real-world applications, though requires an additional research to make this technology scalable across a variety of imaging devices.
title Assessing the Viability of Synthetic Physical Copy Detection Patterns on Different Imaging Systems
topic Cryptography and Security
Information Theory
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2410.02575