Forum Moderators: not2easy
When you boil all things down, there is nothing you can do to prevent piracy short of not putting the material you want to protect on the Internet in the first place. The next best thing is a paid subscription service.
I've sliced images up, either into one, two or three vertical images. They load right next to each other and appear as a single image on the web page, but if you "right click" on the image, you only download 1/3 of the image!
this seems to fool people into believing they have downloaded the entire image and they move on.
yeah, there are ways around this, like taking a screenshot and then cropping the image and saving it, but I say make 'em work for the image they are stealing.
I ran across something awhile back that had a transparent GIF on TOP of the image, so if you right clicked, you just downloaded the transparent GIF. Looked pretty frustrating to me.
Bottom line is, there is no sure way to protect your images in cyberspace at this point in time; at least none that I've seen.
Many here [google.com] also.
Best Solution: Don't do it.
Sid
i decided to put all these into the site i am currently building:
transparent gif
selecetive right click disable
cache control (source forge)
prntscrn disable (sourceforge)
screen capture disable (my elder bro)
Hidden watermarks
and the folder in which the images are bieng kept has access control, so ONLY the php page serving the images has access to it.
i agree that no one can ward off a real thief, but with these in the pocket, one can stop at least 99% of all the attacks.
I know it sounds new age-like, but if you expect people to "steal" your stuff, they will. Most people don't steal. At most they will take your images, add them in their image folders and look at them. There's nothing wrong with that. The few who use your images somewhere else will always find a way to get them. Are you gonna try to erase their cache too?
This is a fight you ultimately can't win, and besides simple measures, like watermarks, you shouldn't be wasting time and energy preventing the impossible.
i agree on that point too. maximum ppl download them to the hard drive and keep them there. i myself do that regularly.
your post really calls for a meeting between me and dad.
Thx
- transparent gif
- selecetive right click disable
- cache control (source forge)
- prntscrn disable (sourceforge)
- screen capture disable (my elder bro)
- Hidden watermarks
It might also help if you were informed about the actual efficacy of these:
You are attempting the impossible. You are allowing the image to actually travel across the internet to my computer and then trying to prevent me from keeping it...it doesn't add up.
I'm not trying to be snarky either, but at least 4 of your 6[!] proposed solutions are trivially circumvent-able ; and you shouldn't kid yourself that it's only 'power users' who can figure that out.
-B
The more annoying you try to be about these kinds of things, the more copies of your images you are likely to get sent via email.
While people are often quick to point out that no method will secure your images from everyone it does not follow that there is no good reason to secure your images from anyone.
Using CSS is obviously not a very good way of protecting your image from people who know about CSS or from people who use Firefox etc. But I hope it's not too much of a generalisation to say that that demographic is less likely to hijack your images, create their own site by plagiarising yours, hotlink your images, sell your images on eBay, etc.
However, using CSS to give a transparent .gif the background of the image you want to display is incredibly effective at protecting your images from those rank amateurs with a free hosted website who don't know how to download and upload images so they just hotlink straight to your server.
I should know. In May 1997 I was that rank amateur. >;-S
I would add to caveats:
1) I think hotlinking is a far more serious issue than simply having people download your images. It wouldn't be so much of a problem for me, perhaps, if I was using an Apache server, but I'm not.
2) Since viewing a webpage means that all images on the page have downloaded to your computer, I agree it's always worth putting a URL or a mini copyright notice on your most valuable images.