Privacy protection by concealing persons in circumstantial video image
Proceedings of the 2001 workshop on Perceptive user interfaces
Preserving Privacy by De-Identifying Face Images
IEEE Transactions on Knowledge and Data Engineering
Tools for protecting the privacy of specific individuals in video
EURASIP Journal on Applied Signal Processing
Efficient Selective Encryption Scheme for the H.264/Scalable Video Coding(SVC)
NCM '08 Proceedings of the 2008 Fourth International Conference on Networked Computing and Advanced Information Management - Volume 01
Assessing privacy criteria for drm using eu privacy legislation
Proceedings of the 8th ACM workshop on Digital rights management
Selective encryption for hierarchical MPEG
CMS'06 Proceedings of the 10th IFIP TC-6 TC-11 international conference on Communications and Multimedia Security
The MPEG-21 rights expression language and rights data dictionary
IEEE Transactions on Multimedia
Privacy Protected Surveillance Using Secure Visual Object Coding
IEEE Transactions on Circuits and Systems for Video Technology
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Privacy and security have always been key concerns for individuals. They have also been closely related concepts: in order to increase their perception of security, people sacrifice a part of their privacy by accepting to be surveilled by others. The tradeoff between both is usually reasonable and commonly accepted; however, the case of videosurveillance systems has been particularly controversial since their inception, as their benefits are not perceived to compensate for the privacy loss in many cases. The situation has become even worse during the last years with the massive deployment of these systems, which often do not provide satisfactory guarantees for the citizens. This paper proposes a DRM-based framework for videosurveillance to achieve a better balance between both concepts: it protects privacy of the surveilled individuals, whilst giving support to efficient automated surveillance.