Web Analytics RiceHigh's Pentax Blog: Notice: Copy and Paste of Text and and Saving of Pictures within Blog are Disabled

Monday, August 24, 2020

Notice: Copy and Paste of Text and and Saving of Pictures within Blog are Disabled

In order to avoid possible copyrights infringement, which I could see from my Blog log from time to time, the copy and paste of text and saving of pictures and images within my Blog are disabled, with immediate effect.

Thank you for your continuous support and happy reading and viewing! :-D

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n order to avoid possible copyrights infringement, which I could see from my Blog log from time to time, the copy and paste of text and saving of pictures and images within my Blog are disabled, with immediate effect.

Thank you for your continuous support and happy reading and viewing! :-D

Great, just had to switch of Javascript to copy and paste this. ???
#areYouSerious?
6 replies · active 233 weeks ago
When there is a will, there is a way to do it. ;-D
Thanks for your test and the friendly reminder. I have rewritten the code in non-js, please try again. When there is a will, there is a way. :-P
OK, here we go again then ;)
<div class="post-body entry-content" id="post-body-9000915919319898831" itemprop="description articleBody">
In order to avoid possible copyrights infringement, which I could see from my Blog log from time to time, the copy and paste of text and saving of pictures and images within my Blog are disabled, with immediate effect.

<div>
Not sure how picture copying could be prevented. Whatever a browser can display, that can be extracted?
e.g. if copy a picture's deep link into the browser's adress bar, then I can download it from there, e.g. https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-d7rt30LgpHI/X0NpxCrLR2...
In fact, I could bar any possible copy of images and text in any browser including both desktop and mobile version ones with just css/html code but it turned out to be too restrictive such that too much inconvenience may be caused to readers. In view of this, I opted to implement the restrction in a moderate way.
I tend to doubt it. One can run the content through any regex replacer plugin, which modifies or gets rid of any CSS or JavaScript elements, which get in the way of copying.

Browsers have a developer mode, which lets you inspect or tweak the content (its DOM object model) after it has been built. So this should get you to any information you want.

The browsers' developer modes also allow you to trace, what resource (e.g. what picture) has been loaded from what deep URL.

The last resort: cut out the desired rectangle from the screen with any screen capturing program. This gives you any picture at full resolution, if it is not larger than your monitor. If the rectangular content is text, run it through any free/open-source text recognition program (or Adobe Acrobat if you have that).

I think the only way to really protect content somewhat is Digital Rights Management. But not sure if DRM is availble for text or pictures? probably not, because it is just too easy to circumvent that with the simple screen snapshot technique?
if you really want block copy paste, you should use those javascript to inject random character with tiny font size inbetween each character,

so normal people can still read your article, but when they copy, those tiny text will mess the content they get,

right now, if you right click > inspect, you still can see the clean text block.

but the bad thing is , it may affect google search find your content, since, behind the text code, it is actually random text mixing with the text block.

for example,

you cant copy
you.TINYFONTCHAR.coTINYFONTCHARpy thisTINYFONTCHAR. like that

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