In article , dE|_
wrote:
"Jim Lesurf" wrote:
Can anyone give me a lead for this;
Nor do you say why what you need could not be done by watermarking the
audio externally to the digital recording process. e.g. by low level
ENF.
Sorry, it does not exist yet and the options would be all mine which is
why I have not specified. Due to the amount there would be, mp3 on hard
disk would be most practical.
I suspect you will find that forensic workers would be suspect of lossy
formats like mp3 as they do not represent a full record of the source.
However I can't say more as I don't know enough about the specifics.
They may also want the orginal HD to examine, not just files copied from.
This lets them check the context actually on the disc itself to see if
there are any signs of tampering external to the file payload.
Similarly, they might end up requiring source code for any routines used to
process the recordngs. So open source systems have an advantage here in
evidential terms even if you then have less cover for any aspects you want
to keep commericial in confidence. However I am biassed here. As an
(ex-)academic I regard open source as an inherently more satisfactory
approach to any process which might need to be scrutinised or checked.
I had thought about watermarking with a slow flanger. What is this ENF
you speak of?
Electric Network Frequency. In effect, allowing the sound recording to
have a small amount of 'mains hum'. (Which tends to happen anyway, even
when you *don't* want it. ;- )
The frequency of mains hum varies with time, and differs from time to time
and with the location (i.e. which mains network covers your area). Hence
it can and has been used as evicence that recordings were recorded when
and where claimed and have no breaks or edits - or not! Bit like an audio
forensic version of dating a tree by its growth rings. Surprisngly, this
technique has been used a number of times in court, etc, and apparently
works well. Even for recordings made on battery systems where the mics
picked up the hum as interference.
On 31 Oct in uk.rec.audio, dE|_ wrote:
"Jim Lesurf" asked: snip
Are you a member of the AES? if so you can look at the recent papers
in JAES and conferences about 'forensic audio'. They will give you
some ideas on this, and some individuals you could contact who might
advise.
No, I'm not. I'll Google 'forensic audio' next,
You may find names like Catalin Grigoras, or maybe Koenig and Lacey of BEK
TEK LLC may help. But there may well be others who are more relevant to
what you require. Afraid I can't say for sure as this isn't really my
field. I've only learned about this via casual interest in Journal papers,
etc.[1]
if you've got any pdfs of these papers you could pass on to help with my
job challenge just swap spambusters with del.
There are a number of them on the AES website and/or on CDROMs they
supply. Afraid I don't specialise in Forensic Audio so don't have (or know
the contents of) the bulk of them. Hence if you are serious about this I
would recommend membership. Or finding if a local Uni library has JAES at
least. There are also, I think, Journals on Forensic Science that will deal
with such issues. Again a Uni library may help.
If your recordings would be likely end up as court evidence then there is a
great deal involved in establishing that the methods you choose would be
accepted as evidence. Otherwise 'legal eagles' will find all kinds of
excuses for them to be ruled out of consideration. So I'm afraid this isn't
simply a matter of decent engineering and knowing about crypography or
being able to watermark/sign data.
However the levels you'd need to go to would depend on the nature of the
confidence required and the sort of contest the results would be involved
in deciding. Internal arguments within a company could be decided as the
company chose.
Slainte,
Jim
[1] The usual process where you start reading journals and books for one
purpose, only to find you've diverted onto reading something totally
different which seemed interesting when encountered. :-)
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