An interesting article about the digital watermarking (for images) is N.Memon and P.W. Wong, "A Buyer-Seller Watermarking Protocol", in IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, vol. 10, no. 4, April 2001.
Another article about audio watermarking is in Electronics Letters (4 Jan 2001) by J.W. Seok and J.W. Hong.
You can see the abstracts at www.ieee.org/ieeexplore It's interesting to note that the first work was sponsored by the NSF.
So pregnant woman are carrying goods? Can these goods be bought and sold? Who is responsible if he/she is defective, say not being able to directly interface a monitor (blind):-)
[Please don't think I'm talking about abortion (we don't want to start that).]
So a piano is not a good? Is an oscillocope?
This snippet better be a joke.
The New York City Transit bus maps (nyct.org = mta.nyc.ny.us = mnr.org = lirr.org)
These are copy protected, and are _really_ nice (especially for a public agency).
An interesting article about the digital watermarking (for images) is N.Memon and P.W. Wong, "A Buyer-Seller Watermarking Protocol", in IEEE Transactions on Image Processing, vol. 10, no. 4, April 2001.
Another article about audio watermarking is in Electronics Letters (4 Jan 2001) by J.W. Seok and J.W. Hong.
You can see the abstracts at www.ieee.org/ieeexplore It's interesting to note that the first work was sponsored by the NSF.
So pregnant woman are carrying goods? Can these goods be bought and sold? Who is responsible if he/she is defective, say not being able to directly interface a monitor (blind) :-)
[Please don't think I'm talking about abortion (we don't want to start that).]
So a piano is not a good? Is an oscillocope?
This snippet better be a joke.
The New York City Transit bus maps (nyct.org = mta.nyc.ny.us = mnr.org = lirr.org) These are copy protected, and are _really_ nice (especially for a public agency).