Forum Moderators: not2easy
Imagine JPEG images contain meta information about the owner and his site. Could be a watermark or something else. Must be speedily extractable by a web server and can be removed by the owner (in case the owner sells the image).
Imagine also that a new feature is added to the Apache web server software. Let's call it 'unauthorised reproduction notification'. It works as follows´:
- when the server receives a GET request for a JPEG image from a browser it checks if the image belongs to the site where it is hosted (by comparing the owner meta data in the JPEG file with the web address of the site where the image is hosted)
- if there is an unauthorised reproduction, the server automatically notifies the legitimate owner, for instance by email
Of course this copyright protection could be removed by a knowledgeable person, but it would work in a % of situations.
New releases of the Apache web server (and possibly other server software as well) would however have to incorporate this feature.
Not sure if you know about Digimarc technology but it is a stand alone product that does a similar thing to what you suggest, but not on a server. The artist/photographer can put a digital signature 'inside' the JPEG which stays with it when downloaded or emailed. You get an individual key that you can use to verify an original image is one of yours when contronted by a copyright infringement. Photoshop can display Digimarc info contained in an image.
If you subscribe to the premium version I think it can also track your images across the web - amazing stuff. At the moment I am using a visible watermark to protect my images but am looking seriously at Digimarc for the future.
Does not require hardware, only software at the server. Requires publisher to contact author. Possibly build in automatic contact of author to make micro-payment every time image is displayed.
Standard in other security areas. Public/Private key method.
the other way round is under strong development: image recorgnition. when google will have the option in image search: find similar images (because of their look), then your own law unit can search the web for your works and derivations of it. i think, this is what would come up earlier then a special webserver edition.