Yep, like when an old employee leaves that decided to encrypt all of his code. But it's funny none the less to see people getting all worked up about it. LOL, I was having fun just watching this unravel. I'm not a pirate of code, in fact if I were I would only hurt my own future by not supporting my community. Ray
At 03:30 PM 1/28/02 -0800, you wrote: >What if Ray is working on an application developed for a client by a 3rd >party and they encrypted the Application.cfm and a few other key pages. >He needs to now decrypt those pages for maintenance? Would he be >violating any licenses then? > >The general use of cfdecrypt seems to be for bad, but it can serve a >legit purpose once in a blue moon. > >Right Ray? > >t > >********************************************************************** >Tyler M. Fitch >Certified Advanced ColdFusion 5 Developer >http://isitedesign.com >********************************************************************** > > > >-----Original Message----- >From: Michael Dinowitz [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] >Sent: Monday, January 28, 2002 3:16 PM >To: CF-Talk >Subject: RE: Decrypting source code > > >The CF-Talk list is for tech talk about CF. An intellectual property >discussion belongs on the CF-Community list or somewhere else. I'll >gladly create another list for it if you want. That being said, >decrypting encoded CF pages is a violation of the licensing agreement. > > ______________________________________________________________________ Why Share? Dedicated Win 2000 Server � PIII 800 / 256 MB RAM / 40 GB HD / 20 GB MO/XFER Instant Activation � $99/Month � Free Setup http://www.pennyhost.com/redirect.cfm?adcode=coldfusionc FAQ: http://www.thenetprofits.co.uk/coldfusion/faq Archives: http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ Unsubscribe: http://www.houseoffusion.com/index.cfm?sidebar=lists

