Unlike hiding bit-level messages, hiding image-level messages is more challenging, which requires large capacity, high imperceptibility, and high security. Although recent advances in hiding image-level messages have been remarkable, existing schemes are limited to lossless spatial images as covers and cannot be directly applied to JPEG images, the ubiquitous lossy format images in daily life. The difficulties of migration are caused by the lack of targeted design and the loss of details due to lossy decompression and re-compression. Considering that taking DCT densely on $8\times8$ image patches is the core of the JPEG compression standard, we design a novel model called \textsf{EFDR}, which can comprehensively \underline{E}xploit \underline{F}ine-grained \underline{D}CT \underline{R}epresentations and embed the secret image into quantized DCT coefficients to avoid the lossy process. Specifically, we transform the JPEG cover image and hidden secret image into fine-grained DCT representations that compact the frequency and are associated with the inter-block and intra-block correlations. Subsequently, the fine-grained DCT representations are further enhanced by a sub-band features enhancement module. Afterward, a transformer-based invertibility module is designed to fuse enhanced sub-band features. Such a design enables a fine-grained self-attention on each sub-band and captures long-range dependencies while maintaining excellent reversibility for hiding and recovery. To our best knowledge, this is the first attempt to embed a color image of equal size in a color JPEG image. Extensive experiments demonstrate the effectiveness of our \textsf{EFDR} with superior performance.
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