The BluMark SDK is available for integration with client systems, MSI cloud-based video onDemand and offline desktop applications, and its biggest draw is how quickly and easily it can be applied to short-form content, which typically has less security around it, is usually hard to retrieve, and usually harder to track. “It’s a game-changer for the forensic video watermarking space.” “It’s enabled MarcoPolo to embed imperceptible, robust payloads into short-form content, and retrieve those payloads in a matter of seconds,” Gamble said.
The presentation - “A Revolution in Digital Watermarking, Watermark Every Frame, Detect in Seconds” - saw Michael Gamble, SVP of customer service for MSI, walk attendees through how the advanced forensic video watermarking technology enabled MarcoPolo to embed and detect payloads in seconds, and how the watermarking technology confronts current industry limitations by providing robust, near-instant payload insertion and retrieval from any length video. “Coming to MSI, and realizing the economics matched up, was great news to me.” “We’ve got hundreds of clips that need to be protected, and the economics of protecting those clips was very important,” Whitebread said April 7, during the Cybersecurity & Content Protection Summit at NAB. The solution was Media Science International’s (MSI) BluMark forensic video watermarking technology, which enables the ability to forensically watermark video of any length, and retrieve the watermark within seconds. James Whitebread, CTO for MarcoPolo Learning, a children’s STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math) educational media company, was faced with a dilemma: how to protect the hundreds and hundreds of short-form clips the company offers, without breaking the bank?