Greg,

I have to disagree with you. I worked as the IT person for a motion picture group at a f500 company. Of that, I worked foe the story dept.

I worker with them, on the watermarking of scripts. It can be done, but with anything, it requires time, money, equipment, but once in place, I could tell you from any given digital copy, who's office it came from, moreover, any hardcopy had a watermark on each and every page.

It can be bullet proof, but as passwords go. Write them down, and stick it in a saftey deposit box, or mail it to your self, etc.

][=+>Sent from my iPhone<+=][

On May 19, 2008, at 6:45 PM, Greg Lindahl <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On Mon, May 19, 2008 at 06:13:38PM -0700, Minstrel Geoffrey wrote:

Regardless of your platform, Adobe Acrobat Professional will allow
water seals digitally embedded into the copy. You also can password
protect it with the users name, code, etc that would reflect that
person whom bought it.

There is also a way to encrypt of, so it can't be copied, printed,
editeded, etc.

These features are an illusion: some are easy to circumvent (the
no-print flag), others decrease usability. If the customer forgets
their password, how do you plan on supporting them?

Watermarking is definitely a good step to take, but of course this,
too, can be circumvented.

-- greg







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