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#1
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Prevent Copy to Clipboard on MS Word
Hi,
I know how to password protect a document from being modified or even the Protect Document Comments option. But i notice that no matter what once you have the document open you can still select text and do a copy (either right click and copy, or Ctrl+C), is there any way at all to prevent people copying stuff off of your word doc? I really work hard on some docs and i dont want people just sitting there, selecting text, doing a copy paste into another word doc and using it! I know this is possible because long time ago i've seen a doc sent by a customer that was like this. If you even tried to select text the cursor would just jump back to the top, and I don't believe that it was a macro doing that, it had to be just some feature within Word itself, could someone please help? I have MS Word 2003. |
#2
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Prevent Copy to Clipboard on MS Word
This is what's known as "a fool's errand".
You can click Tools Protect Document, in the task pane click the check box under "Editing restrictions", set the dropdown to "Filling in forms", and click the Start Enforcing Protection button. If your document doesn't contain any form fields, it will behave as you described -- clicking anywhere in the document will send the cursor back to the top of the document. However, this "protection" is so easy to defeat that it's laughable. Just open a new blank document and use the Insert File command to insert the protected document. Presto, no protection. Even if you manage to come up with a better protection scheme, such as using Microsoft's Information Rights Management (IRM), it's still true that if someone can see your document they can reproduce it in editable form. The best you can do is to make it more difficult for them. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. On Wed, 1 Aug 2007 22:27:49 -0400, "-=- Ajit C -=-" wrote: Hi, I know how to password protect a document from being modified or even the Protect Document Comments option. But i notice that no matter what once you have the document open you can still select text and do a copy (either right click and copy, or Ctrl+C), is there any way at all to prevent people copying stuff off of your word doc? I really work hard on some docs and i dont want people just sitting there, selecting text, doing a copy paste into another word doc and using it! I know this is possible because long time ago i've seen a doc sent by a customer that was like this. If you even tried to select text the cursor would just jump back to the top, and I don't believe that it was a macro doing that, it had to be just some feature within Word itself, could someone please help? I have MS Word 2003. |
#3
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Prevent Copy to Clipboard on MS Word
Thanks for the advice Jay. Yea you're right, it completely defeats the
purpose.. wonder why they even include such a 'feature'... like "hey here's how to secure ur document... annnnnd here's how to break it" all in the same breath... the only other option i have is to make it PDF (though i guess even that can be broken into if there's a determined mind and the file is unencrypted) but not everyone uses PDF and actually ask back to mail my document in word.. frustrating! "Jay Freedman" wrote in message ... This is what's known as "a fool's errand". You can click Tools Protect Document, in the task pane click the check box under "Editing restrictions", set the dropdown to "Filling in forms", and click the Start Enforcing Protection button. If your document doesn't contain any form fields, it will behave as you described -- clicking anywhere in the document will send the cursor back to the top of the document. However, this "protection" is so easy to defeat that it's laughable. Just open a new blank document and use the Insert File command to insert the protected document. Presto, no protection. Even if you manage to come up with a better protection scheme, such as using Microsoft's Information Rights Management (IRM), it's still true that if someone can see your document they can reproduce it in editable form. The best you can do is to make it more difficult for them. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. On Wed, 1 Aug 2007 22:27:49 -0400, "-=- Ajit C -=-" wrote: Hi, I know how to password protect a document from being modified or even the Protect Document Comments option. But i notice that no matter what once you have the document open you can still select text and do a copy (either right click and copy, or Ctrl+C), is there any way at all to prevent people copying stuff off of your word doc? I really work hard on some docs and i dont want people just sitting there, selecting text, doing a copy paste into another word doc and using it! I know this is possible because long time ago i've seen a doc sent by a customer that was like this. If you even tried to select text the cursor would just jump back to the top, and I don't believe that it was a macro doing that, it had to be just some feature within Word itself, could someone please help? I have MS Word 2003. |
#4
Posted to microsoft.public.word.newusers
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Prevent Copy to Clipboard on MS Word
In the minds of Microsoft developers, "protect" and "secure" are
completely different things. When you "protect a document for forms", you're preventing the accidental alteration of the text that surrounds the form fields. There's absolutely no promise -- not even an intention -- of protecting the document against deliberate alteration or copying. It's just meant to make it easy to fill in forms. "Securing" a document so that it can't be changed is a whole different proposition. As I said, you can only put obstacles in the way of someone who really wants to copy and/or change your document. You can encrypt it, as PDF or by using IRM, and hope it takes a very long time to break the encryption. But once the document can be displayed on screen, it can be copied, no matter what schemes you apply. You may be able to digitally "watermark" it so you can later prove that a copy came from your document, but even that can be defeated by printing, scanning, and OCRing it. On Thu, 2 Aug 2007 20:17:13 -0400, "-=- Ajit C -=-" wrote: Thanks for the advice Jay. Yea you're right, it completely defeats the purpose.. wonder why they even include such a 'feature'... like "hey here's how to secure ur document... annnnnd here's how to break it" all in the same breath... the only other option i have is to make it PDF (though i guess even that can be broken into if there's a determined mind and the file is unencrypted) but not everyone uses PDF and actually ask back to mail my document in word.. frustrating! "Jay Freedman" wrote in message .. . This is what's known as "a fool's errand". You can click Tools Protect Document, in the task pane click the check box under "Editing restrictions", set the dropdown to "Filling in forms", and click the Start Enforcing Protection button. If your document doesn't contain any form fields, it will behave as you described -- clicking anywhere in the document will send the cursor back to the top of the document. However, this "protection" is so easy to defeat that it's laughable. Just open a new blank document and use the Insert File command to insert the protected document. Presto, no protection. Even if you manage to come up with a better protection scheme, such as using Microsoft's Information Rights Management (IRM), it's still true that if someone can see your document they can reproduce it in editable form. The best you can do is to make it more difficult for them. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. On Wed, 1 Aug 2007 22:27:49 -0400, "-=- Ajit C -=-" wrote: Hi, I know how to password protect a document from being modified or even the Protect Document Comments option. But i notice that no matter what once you have the document open you can still select text and do a copy (either right click and copy, or Ctrl+C), is there any way at all to prevent people copying stuff off of your word doc? I really work hard on some docs and i dont want people just sitting there, selecting text, doing a copy paste into another word doc and using it! I know this is possible because long time ago i've seen a doc sent by a customer that was like this. If you even tried to select text the cursor would just jump back to the top, and I don't believe that it was a macro doing that, it had to be just some feature within Word itself, could someone please help? I have MS Word 2003. -- Regards, Jay Freedman Microsoft Word MVP FAQ: http://word.mvps.org Email cannot be acknowledged; please post all follow-ups to the newsgroup so all may benefit. |
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