Protected Interactive 3D Graphics Via Remote Rendering
David Koller,
Michael Turitzin,
Marc Levoy
(Stanford University),
Marco Tarini, Giuseppe Croccia, Paolo Cignoni, and Roberto Scopigno
(ISTI-CNR, Italy)
Proceedings of ACM SIGGRAPH 2004
Abstract:
Valuable 3D graphical models, such as high-resolution digital scans of
cultural heritage objects, may require protection to prevent piracy
or misuse, while still allowing for interactive display and manipulation
by a widespread audience.
We have investigated techniques for protecting 3D graphics content,
and we have developed a remote rendering system suitable for
sharing archives of 3D models while protecting the 3D geometry from
unauthorized extraction.
The system consists of a 3D viewer client that includes low-resolution
versions of the 3D models, and a rendering server that renders and returns
images of high-resolution models according to client requests. The server
implements a number of defenses to guard against 3D
reconstruction attacks, such as monitoring and limiting request
streams, and slightly perturbing and distorting the rendered images.
We consider several possible types of reconstruction attacks on such a
rendering server, and we examine how these attacks can be defended
against without excessively compromising the interactive experience
for non-malicious users.
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A shortened version of this paper was the
cover article in the June 2005 issue of CACM.