![Censored Censored](/uploads/1/3/4/5/134539584/404422783.jpg)
You can censor a video with video editing software like VideoStudio. Follow along with our tutorial below to learn the easiest way to censor a video. You can make a video about anything. Any business, any hobby, any subject, any story, and put it out there in the world for people to enjoy. But perhaps the story you tell has moments that might be sensitive to some viewers. Bad language maybe. VideoStudio lets you censor videos to keep tight control of your content without compromising on your ability to tell your story. Read on to find out how to censor a video.
You can censor a video with a mosaic blur or by adding a graphic overtop of the parts you wish to hide. To censor a video, or to cover a section of video - a face, a license plate, a logo, we use Motion Tracking to ensure focus is covered as it moves along the screen.
How To Remove Mosaic Censoring
Since this was 'like nudity' and not actual intentional removal of nudity, it may be damaged caused by that horrible 'delogo' (or 'de-logo') filter made for VirtualDub and/or Avisynth. It's a destructive and crappy filter, with the net effect being little more than creating fuzzy square blobs on your video.
- Video Eraser – Remove Logo is designed especially for iOS users to erase watermark from video. Every user can have 8 GB free space on this app. Besides removing logo from video, it is also available to add or edit the watermark.
- Select the censored image you want to restore and open it in the program. The photo will appear in the main window. Step 2: Mark the censored area using the marker tool. Inpaint lets you retouch the censored area and hide it from the picture by extrapolating surrounding pixels to the censored part of the image.
Quick Reference
Install VideoStudio
To install VideoStudio video editing software on your PC, download and run the installation file above. Continue following on-screen instructions to complete the setup process. Adobe cs5 master collection for mac free download.Open track motion
With your video clip selected on the timeline, click the Track Motion button on the Toolbar, or right click and select Track motion.Select video tracker
In the Tracker type area you can select to set a tracker area ( a fixed area) or to set a Multi-point area ( dynamic area that adjusts in shape and size as the object moves). Move your target over the area you wish to track and adjust the size.Select mosaic blur to censor a part of a video
To censor a video and disguise the section you will track, we will select to ‘Apply Mosaic’ button to enable the mosaic and then click the arrow beside the button to choose a Rectangle or Circle mosaic and adjust the size of the mosaic with the drop down. This will censor the section of your video as the object moves.Track motion
Click the Track Motion button. The video is played as the tracking path is generated.The area of the tracked object will have a mosaic-like effect to censor this area of the video when you view the video in the Preview Window of the main program. Click OK and return to the timeline.
As some of you may know, one of the defining features of Japanese porn is that genitals are pixelated. This might seem a little odd, considering the reputation that Japan has for being slightly on the sexually depraved side, but for decades there has been a law that requires all domestic porn to be censored. Unpixelated porn is produced, but because it’s illegal (and actually policed) it’s usually only produced by smaller studios or enterprising sole traders. Now, for the discerning porn watcher, there’s finally another solution: A depixelation machine!
Depixelation is a topic that’s particularly close to ExtremeTech’s heart — not because of porn, you understand, but because of 8-bit art. To this day, an 8-bit depixelation algorithm developed by Microsoft Research was one of the site’s most popular stories of all time. Given how new technologies are nearly always first adopted by the gaming and sex industries, we’re actually rather surprised that it took this long for depixelation machines so long to appear. (And yes, I’m as curious as you about whether these machines could be used to more effectively upscale your old NES games. I’ve emailed one of the machine makers to ask for a review unit, and hope to report back with my findings soon.)
The devices, called mosaic removal machines (モザイク除去機, mozaiku jyokyo-ki), essentially consist of a video pass-through box with a bunch of knobs on. Sadly, there don’t appear to be any photos of what’s inside these boxes, but given that the boxes sport composite and coaxial input/output, we’re probably not talking about hyper-advanced tech. Going by the labels, it seems you get a targeting reticule that depixelates everything beneath it. It doesn’t appear to automatically target the pixelated regions; instead, you have to move a little joystick around and twiddle a “zoom” knob to match the size of the genital in question. (Read: Just how big are porn sites?)
According to Kotaku, there is a mass debate over whether these machines actually work. (Kotaku also says that Japanese porn is painstakingly censored by hand, earning the highly skilled laborers $15 per hour.) Scientifically speaking, it depends on how the original censorship mosaic is produced. Similar to how Photoshop can de-blur photos if it can work out what camera movement caused the blur, if the pixelation algorithm is known, it might be possible to rebuild the original image. Ultimately, though, the main problem with pixelation is that you can’t recreate data that doesn’t exist; if you imagine that each censored pixel has been replaced by a block of 32×32 pixels, there is no way to recover all 1024 pixels. At best, by analyzing its neighbours and using some other more complex methods, you might get a handful of pixels that are the correct color — at worst, you’ll get just a single pixel of the correct color. So, while this machine might unscramble the mosaic, it won’t miraculously restore the genitals to their original high-definition glory. One Japanese website (which doesn’t contain nudity but isn’t work-safe) claims the de-mosaic device costs almost $900; I really hope that isn’t the case.
Remove Censor From Video
As I wrote this story, another possible solution came to mind: Genital replacement. Rather than trying to salvage what little detail is left, it should be possible to write some software that removes the pixelated region, and then splices in a matching organ from a database of porn. It obviously wouldn’t match perfectly, but it would be easy enough to match skin tone, and perhaps a few other features.
![Censored video removal software for mac Censored video removal software for mac](/uploads/1/3/4/5/134539584/905898292.jpg)
Censored Video Removal Software
The other option, of course, is that Japanese porn watchers should just start appending “uncensored” to their BitTorrent searches.