From: Abdulhakeem Othman on 12 Mar 2010 15:28 Helloooooooooooo every one. We know that an rgb image is composed from red ,green and blue. In a color image watermarking you must embed a watermark image into one of the channel (red,green ,blue),or you must work on one of them. So ,I have read some paper about color image watermarking ,and no one of them work on the red channel. My question is why we don't use the red channel for watermarking ? I think in evrey color image (RGB image) ,the red has the biggest entropy .
From: Steven Lord on 12 Mar 2010 16:05 "Abdulhakeem Othman" <abdulhakeem.osman(a)gmail.com> wrote in message news:hne84i$f9m$1(a)fred.mathworks.com... > Helloooooooooooo every one. > > We know that an rgb image is composed from red ,green and blue. > In a color image watermarking you must embed a watermark image into one of > the channel (red,green ,blue),or you must work on one of them. > > So ,I have read some paper about color image watermarking ,and no one of > them work on the red channel. > > My question is why we don't use the red channel for watermarking ? > I think in evrey color image (RGB image) ,the red has the biggest entropy > . This isn't really a MATLAB question, so you might receive more interest on an image processing specific group, like sci.image.processing. If your news server doesn't carry it, you can access it via Google groups (http://groups.google.com) or other news providers. -- Steve Lord slord(a)mathworks.com comp.soft-sys.matlab (CSSM) FAQ: http://matlabwiki.mathworks.com/MATLAB_FAQ
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