Echomark Web Watermarking

Protecting Content ​on the ​Web

The ​web is a ​great ​way to share your best work, but ​preventing ​unauthorized ​disclosure is essential ​to maintain ​your ​competitive advantage, ​preserve trade ​secrets, and ​prevent others from exploiting your ​innovations without permission. ​This is an example page with a variety ​of ​multi-modal content ​to ​show how ​Echomark protects ​such data from unauthorized ​disclosure.

Forensic ​watermarking is a digital security technique ​used ​to ​embed unique, imperceptible markers into multimedia content, such as ​images, audio, ​or video. These ​markers ​serve ​as a form of digital ​fingerprint, ​allowing ​content owners to ​track ​and identify ​unauthorized ​use ​or ​distribution ​of their media. ​Unlike ​traditional watermarking, ​which ​aims to visibly mark ​content, ​forensic ​watermarking is designed ​to be invisible ​to the human eye or ear, yet ​it remains ​detectable under analysis. ​The primary purpose of ​forensic ​watermarking is to deter ​piracy ​and track ​the origin ​of leaks ​in cases of ​unauthorized sharing ​or reproduction. ​By embedding distinctive identifiers specific to ​each user or ​distribution channel, forensic ​watermarking ​allows content creators and distributors to ​trace ​the source ​of copyright violations ​or breaches, offering a powerful tool for digital rights ​management (DRM).

 

Multimedia ​Forensic Watermarks

EchoMark protects online ​injects invisible ​forensic watermarks in online ​content before it is delivered ​to your ​users. Simple rules can ​be ​used ​to mark ​text content, image ​content, and even documents ​served from your ​website! ​The ​image below is watermarked.

 

Preserving Formatting and ​Professionalism

Every bit ​of content ​can have ​invisible ​cookie crumbs to protect against unauthorized ​disclosure. ​Our algorithms closely preserve the formatting of ​the original ​content.

“A concise ​and ​compelling message belongs here. ​Soon, ​this ​space ​will hold ​the words ​that define your brand.”