Publication | Closed Access
Viewer Experience of Obscuring Scene Elements in Photos to Enhance Privacy
78
Citations
46
References
2018
Year
Unknown Venue
EngineeringInformation SecurityBiometricsInformation ForensicsImage ManipulationCommunicationJournalismPseudonymizationImage AnalysisSocial MediaObscuring Scene ElementsDigital PhotographyPrivacy IssueData PrivacyPrivacy AnonymityPrivacy ConcernViewer ExperiencePrivacyData SecurityComputer VisionSocial ComputingInformation HidingArtsImage Utility
With the rise of digital photography and social networking, people are sharing personal photos online at an unprecedented rate. In addition to their main subject matter, photographs often capture various incidental information that could harm people's privacy. While blurring and other image filters may help obscure private content, they also often affect the utility and aesthetics of the photos, which is important since images shared in social media are mainly for human consumption. Existing studies of privacy-enhancing image filters either primarily focus on obscuring faces, or do not systematically study how filters affect image utility. To understand the trade-offs when obscuring various sensitive aspects of images, we study eleven filters applied to obfuscate twenty different objects and attributes, and evaluate how effectively they protect privacy and preserve image quality for human viewers.
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