On 10/9/2016 3:32 AM, Alan Braslau wrote:
Also pdftk
But, it is naive to believe that a pdf can be "protected" from copying or
extracting, isn't it?
indeed, in a similar fashion as copy protected cd (by making then fagile
for reading on computers) ... 100 years form now they will either laug
Also pdftk
But, it is naive to believe that a pdf can be "protected" from copying or
extracting, isn't it?
Alan
> On Oct 7, 2016, at 09:08, Hans Hagen wrote:
>
> On 10/7/2016 4:50 PM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
>
>> The only way to "protect" contents from editing are the password settings.
On 10/7/2016 4:50 PM, Henning Hraban Ramm wrote:
The only way to "protect" contents from editing are the password settings.
There are free tools to set them, but AFAIK no open source tools except maybe libraries.
qpdf and mutools
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Am 2016-10-07 um 10:39 schrieb Bomber K. :
> I am trying to create a pdf which contains some graphics that I created. I
> want to pass my PDF digitally but I don't want users to be able to
> right-click on a gfx and save it. I think this is called "flattening".
No. Flattening PDFs means to "bur
Hi guys,
I am trying to create a pdf which contains some graphics that I created.
I want to pass my PDF digitally but I don't want users to be able to
right-click on a gfx and save it. I think this is called "flattening".
Is there a way in CTX to create such a file or do I have to recompile
th