I think the bit you found on the PHP forum is a red herring, if the
image doesn't appear in the HTML code *somewhere* then it's not going
to be visible on the screen. It's impossible to totally stop people
accessing an image that's visible in a browser window, you can only
try to make it harder. And even then most of the workarounds will only
affect Windows users, and any savvy user will simply grab it from the
browser cache.
What is it that you are trying to stop people doing? Deep-linking
(which you are already stopping with the .htaccess file), downloading
the image, screengrabs? If there are specific things you want to stop
there may be a way to do it.
Ian
On 29 Jan 2008, at 20:54, Nicolas Cueto wrote:
However, from a browser people could easily
peek at the code and then link to the images
on their own webpage via their url.
My solution for now is to use an .htaccess file
that prohibits such hotlinking. But, obviously, it's
still possible to access any one of the images by
simply entering its url directly into a browser.
Anyway. While looking for a solution, I came upon
this interesting comment on a php/apache forum:
"A better solution would be to use a server-side
scripted approach, where the user sees a single
script-generated page, which then includes images
by calling them by *filename* on the server, not
by URL. These images need not even have a URL,
and would be accessible only by the script."
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