One thing Mr Brooks could do is put that copyright water mark in the most 
annoying place on the photo, like across the rider and horses face, along with 
a 
comment, "To purchase a copy of this photo without this watermark call, 
###-###-####".

In the old days many photography studios stamped "PROOF" just like that on 
proof 
photos. They also did not fully fix the proofs so they would fade over time. 
Some of them would even go so far as to hang the customers photo upside down in 
their studio window so their neighbors could tell they were deadbeats. As you 
can tell from all this it is not a new problem, the technology has changed 
people have not.



David Mann wrote:
> On Oct 13, 2007, at 1:41 PM, David J Brooks wrote:
> 
>> Main page or the sub pages Bill.
>>
>> Some times i feel like changing my water mark from David J Brooks 2007
>> to something like,
>> If you see this any were other than www.caughtinmotion.com please call
>> XXX XXX XXXX so i can charge appropriately.
> 
> Definitely at least one form of contact details in addition to either  
> your name or website.  Just don't bury them somewhere where it's easy  
> to crop or clone them out :)
> 
> I personally wouldn't bother with any technical means to prevent file  
> download as they are trival to bypass, even to the point of using alt 
> +printscreen.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> - Dave
> 
> 

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