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Joseph Williams wrote in message ... (...) holds (...) state (...) the This is so completely wrong I have to comment :-) In most countrise including the US, if you make an image, (unless it's done for an employer as part of your work), you own the (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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"Ahui Herrera" <jedi_agh@yahoo.com> wrote in message news:Gw6q8q.5EE@lugnet.com... (...) [ ... snipped ... ] (...) powerpoint, (...) at (...) protect (...) [ ... snipped ... ] One of the ways around this is to load your PDF file into Photoshop. (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish, lugnet.general)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) This crosses into the neighbourhood of ownership. I don't think anyone holds the copyrights to their creations once posted on Brickshelf. Dosn't it state that once posted all images belong to Lego Inc? The only thing we own is the bricks and (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) Hey .. honestly .. its the publishers fault. Bottom line. Interesting as it may be have you actually thought about it this way. Spend hours designing and building a MOC ... Spend time taking pictures of the MOC ... Spend time manipulating the (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) Okay, the original "crime" is actually re-posting someone else's images on Brickshelf without giving credit and resulting in duplicates. As stated in this thread, pictures posted to a public website are public and the user can do whatever they (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) It doesn't prevent copying. It just makes it harder, which will deter some people, but not everyone. When all is said and done, if I can display the image on my computer screen, then that image must be somewhere in the memory of my computer, (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish, lugnet.general)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) method offers no protection. Simply bring up each page at a sufficient resolution in the Acrobat Reader, Alt-PrintScreen the image to a BMP on the clipboard, paste it into the graphics editing program of your choice and do as you wish with the (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish, lugnet.general)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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<snip> (...) Well in the WORSE-CASE option you can always place your image in powerpoint, one image per slide, use adobe acrobat to print the slides (sett acrobat at the HIGHEST IMAGE LEVEL) and then once you have the .pdf file set the security to (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish, lugnet.general)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) with (...) the (...) Or just use lynx 8?) The point being anything you upload to a public site is publically available - you cannot stop people from downloading it. You've just gotta be vigilant. ROSCO (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish, lugnet.general)
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| | Re: Taking of Images - Question
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(...) ? What am I missing here? 1) When you click on an image in Brickshelf (below the level of a gallery) you are sent directly to the URL for the image. You can't add Javascript to a jpeg. . . 2) Javascript cannot provide any security because it's (...) (23 years ago, 16-May-02, to lugnet.publish, lugnet.general)
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