My client wants to have five CDs containing photos. He will give three of
these CDs to a group. He wants them to see the photos but not to copy
them.
I know this is a tough requirement, because, from what I know, when you
view a photo in your computer, the photo also becomes present somewhere in the
hard disk, and you can, of course, as Emily has pointed out, also use the
screen shot option.
I have set my Nikon D70 to put my name electronically on each photo
taken by this camera. And, as D70 users know, this text can be viewed using
the Nikon Picture Project and possibly other similar programs. But it can also
be erased.
Photoshop 7 has a Web Photo Gallery feature that makes batch printing of
comments on photos. It has a copyright subfunction, too, but I don't know how
it works.
Gregory Fraser
<Gregory.Fraser@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Elson anyone who wants to can copy the
CD. If you want only your client to be able to access the images then
encrypt them with one of the many free encryption programs available and
give the client the key. By the way, did you ask your client if making the
CD copy proof is really what he wants or does he want to prevent
unauthorized viewing of the images? After all what's the harm in copying a
CD full of data you can't read?
If
you could make CDs copy proof, Sony wouldn't be in the pickle they are
now and multi-millionaire musicians would
be mega-millionaires.
Greg