Abstract:Recent years have witnessed the dramatic growth of Internet video traffic, where the video bitstreams are often compressed and delivered in low quality to fit the streamer's uplink bandwidth. To alleviate the quality degradation, it comes the rise of Neural-enhanced Video Streaming (NVS), which shows great prospects to recover low-quality videos by mostly deploying neural super-resolution (SR) on the media server. Despite its benefit, we reveal that current mainstream works with SR enhancement have not achieved the desired rate-distortion trade-off between bitrate saving and quality restoration, due to: (1) overemphasizing the enhancement on the decoder side while omitting the co-design of encoder, (2) inherent limited restoration capacity to generate high-fidelity perceptual details, and (3) optimizing the compression-and-restoration pipeline from the resolution perspective solely, without considering color bit-depth. Aiming at overcoming these limitations, we are the first to conduct the encoder-decoder (i.e., codec) synergy by leveraging the visual-synthesis genius of diffusion models. Specifically, we present the Codec-aware Diffusion Modeling (CaDM), a novel NVS paradigm to significantly reduce streaming delivery bitrate while holding pretty higher restoration capacity over existing methods. First, CaDM improves the encoder's compression efficiency by simultaneously reducing resolution and color bit-depth of video frames. Second, CaDM provides the decoder with perfect quality enhancement by making the denoising diffusion restoration aware of encoder's resolution-color conditions. Evaluation on public cloud services with OpenMMLab benchmarks shows that CaDM significantly saves streaming bitrate by a nearly 100 times reduction over vanilla H.264 and achieves much better recovery quality (e.g., FID of 0.61) over state-of-the-art neural-enhancing methods.