Honestly, there isn’t much you can do. Unless you could make your very own website and copyright the heck out of it. It will cost you lots, too. Good luck.
If they can read it, they can copy it. If you don’t want someone to be able to copy it, don’t put it on the public internet (but I guess that would kind of defeat your purpose). Any time you spend trying to “protect” your code through obfuscation, “right-click scripts”, etc.. will be pretty much completely wasted (as it’s trivial to circumvent) and will just aggravate users (or prevent them from seeing your content).
However, if you’re very intent on this, your most secure solution will be to create your web page, take a “print screen” of it - then post the image instead of your regular page. This will force a would-be copier to OCR the text (and if they’re willing to OCR, no right-click script is going to stop them).
I am a blogger myself and I fear for people stealing my content, all I do is randomly try to google for text that I know is on my blog (specific strings etc) and see if anyone has reposted the entire article etc.
One thing I really **** is the blogs that are just RSS auto posts of content and you end up seeing snippets of your blog material there. LOL at least you get a link to your post from there as well.
But it is something really hard for bloggers (especially due to the constantly increasing amount of content on your blog).
Stuart
November 30th, 2008 at 5:15 am
Use FeedBurner’s Some Rights Reserved logo. They provide it to you when you register for a feed for your blog at. And what’s great is it’s free!
December 1st, 2008 at 4:54 pm
Honestly, there isn’t much you can do. Unless you could make your very own website and copyright the heck out of it. It will cost you lots, too. Good luck.
December 2nd, 2008 at 5:14 am
I am sorry to say that you can not make a read only blog there are so many ways by using that any user can copy your blogs posts and data.
December 4th, 2008 at 8:37 pm
If they can read it, they can copy it. If you don’t want someone to be able to copy it, don’t put it on the public internet (but I guess that would kind of defeat your purpose). Any time you spend trying to “protect” your code through obfuscation, “right-click scripts”, etc.. will be pretty much completely wasted (as it’s trivial to circumvent) and will just aggravate users (or prevent them from seeing your content).
However, if you’re very intent on this, your most secure solution will be to create your web page, take a “print screen” of it - then post the image instead of your regular page. This will force a would-be copier to OCR the text (and if they’re willing to OCR, no right-click script is going to stop them).
December 6th, 2008 at 9:48 am
I am a blogger myself and I fear for people stealing my content, all I do is randomly try to google for text that I know is on my blog (specific strings etc) and see if anyone has reposted the entire article etc.
One thing I really **** is the blogs that are just RSS auto posts of content and you end up seeing snippets of your blog material there. LOL at least you get a link to your post from there as well.
But it is something really hard for bloggers (especially due to the constantly increasing amount of content on your blog).
Stuart