Abstract
In video conferencing scenarios, when a user makes a media (video) call, a video/sharing/audio preview viewed on the sender's side may not be what is actually presented on the receiver's side. For example, some post-processing modules (e.g., super-resolution, flicker detection, voice correction, etc.) that operate on the receiver's side can bias the sender's media effects. Techniques are proposed herein that provide for embedding post-processing configuration metadata into a media stream package by a media sender's device. Using the proposed techniques, a media sender can pre-rehearse a meeting and/or perform an in-meeting preview and customize their media stream to avoid hallucinations and/or intention-twisting that may be introduced by far-end (receiver) processing. The customizations can be embedded as metadata in the sender's media stream with little bandwidth overhead.
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Recommended Citation
Tan, Jieyu; Li, Soya; Berger, Espen; and Wang, Wallice, "FAR-END MEDIA EFFECT CONFIGURATIONS TO AVOID UNCONSCIOUS HALLUCINATIONS AND OTHER FAR-END PROCESSING ISSUES", Technical Disclosure Commons, ()
https://www.tdcommons.org/dpubs_series/9051