I think you are right that there is just no way to protect content in a swf file. Maybe the question to ask is, how can we go about convincing fearful IP holders to allow their IP to be embedded in the swf format.

You mentioned relying on the law, and I think that's the right angle. In general, do you really have to worry about what some script kiddies might do with your content once they've stolen it? It seems most of these kinds of concerns are just a waste of worry - it's professionals that license IP, not script kiddies that just want to make a l337 logo for their personal website. Just have a stack of cease and desist papers ready to go out when you spot an IP violation.

Try telling that to someone that owns IP though.

Kevin N.



Weyert de Boer wrote:
I won't take too much effort in protecting your magic. You might wanna
trust on the copyright laws more, though. I have been researching some
dongles protections schemes for my dad lately, even those are sad. I
haven't found the right dongle scheme yet...



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