How privacy-preserving are line clouds? Recovering scene details from 3D lines
Paper in proceeding, 2021

Visual localization is the problem of estimating the camera pose of a given image with respect to a known scene. Visual localization algorithms are a fundamental building block in advanced computer vision applications, including Mixed and Virtual Reality systems. Many algorithms used in practice represent the scene through a Structure-from-Motion (SfM) point cloud and use 2D-3D matches between a query image and the 3D points for camera pose estimation. As recently shown, image details can be accurately recovered from SfM point clouds by translating renderings of the sparse point clouds to images. To address the resulting potential privacy risks for user-generated content, it was recently proposed to lift point clouds to line clouds by replacing 3D points by randomly oriented 3D lines passing through these points. The resulting representation is unintelligible to humans and effectively prevents point cloud-to-image translation. This paper shows that a significant amount of information about the 3D scene geometry is preserved in these line clouds, allowing us to (approximately) recover the 3D point positions and thus to (approximately) recover image content. Our approach is based on the observation that the closest points between lines can yield a good approximation to the original 3D points. Code is available at https://github.com/kunalchelani/Line2Point.

Author

Kunal Chelani

Computer vision and medical image analysis

Fredrik Kahl

Computer vision and medical image analysis

Torsten Sattler

Czech Technical University in Prague

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

Proceedings of the IEEE Computer Society Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition

10636919 (ISSN)

15663-15673
9781665445092 (ISBN)

2021 IEEE/CVF Conference on Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, CVPR 2021
Virtual, Online, USA,

Subject Categories

Media Engineering

Computer Vision and Robotics (Autonomous Systems)

Medical Image Processing

DOI

10.1109/CVPR46437.2021.01541

More information

Latest update

2/3/2022 1