On Wed, 11 Feb 2004 12:34:43 -0500, Craig Taylor <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:


Correct, for all practical purposes. Use QuickTime; it supports media keys that offer some measure of protection.

If the pieces are short enough consider conversion to Flash MX video.
You can import those directly into your cast and keep them internal.


Unfortunately, neither were options. Windows-based laptops and corporate
protocol is Windows Media Player. No QuickTime player and reps and third
party apps can't install - machines are locked down. Regarding Flash - we
have have over 500MB of vid files. Yikes.


Having said that, I am not looking to stop a determined party. Just looking
to make it annoying or, at the very least, unobvious. Colin, you mentioned
renaming the file - simply that just change the extension and make it an
unexpected file name. Troy, you mentioned changing the headers - new ground
for me - relatively easy process? Is there somewhere you can direct me for
more info?


By the way, the files are MPEG1 and I am using MPEGAdvance to bring them in.
Windows 2000/XP with Director MX.


Many thanks,
-_Craig


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Why not think about using Valentina DB, you could store the MPEG videos into the database as BLOB and even encrypt this. That way your video can't be accessed outside your program.


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