Hello, in general, as soon as something is loaded in a browser, it is accessible and ready to be converted into anything possible. swf has no native encryption for texts. but at the same time there is no other format on the web (browser) that gives more security in that concern. it should be quite safe if you render all texts into a jpg - but you'll lose the ability to search for texts in swf. still someone could use OCR software to scan for texts on anything that is displayed on his screen. so: nothing is secure.
hope that helps. filip On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 9:00 AM, Gunivortus Goos < [email protected]> wrote: > Hello, > > for several years I'm using the pdf2swf for publishing texts on my > webpages. > The main reason was and is, to make it more difficult to copy and use those > copyrighted texts illegal. But since the last year I noticed an increase of > stolen texts which I offer. Several Linux users told me, it is really easy > for > them to get my swf files and get the text out of it. > Is there a way to make that more difficult with swftools? (I use the GUI). > Or should I better search then for a scribd-alike software which seems > protect the texts more? > > Using scribd itself (or concurring sites) isn't an alternative, I want to > keep > my texts on my own site. > > Any tips, hints? > > -- > Best regards, > Gunivortus > > >
