Abstract:Video shared over the internet is commonly referred to as user generated content (UGC). UGC video may have low quality due to various factors including previous compression. UGC video is uploaded by users, and then it is re encoded to be made available at various levels of quality and resolution. In a traditional video coding pipeline the encoder parameters are optimized to minimize a rate-distortion criteria, but when the input signal has low quality, this results in sub-optimal coding parameters optimized to preserve undesirable artifacts. In this paper we formulate the UGC compression problem as that of compression of a noisy/corrupted source. The noisy source coding theorem reveals that an optimal UGC compression system is comprised of optimal denoising of the UGC signal, followed by compression of the denoised signal. Since optimal denoising is unattainable and users may be against modification of their content, we propose using denoised references to compute distortion, so the encoding process can be guided towards perceptually better solutions. We demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed strategy for JPEG compression of UGC images and videos.