arstechnica.com— A new watermarking system by Digimark is designed to "phone home" to content owners to alert them to how their materials are being used.
Feb 28, 2007View in Crawl 4
@z0iidSorry. I saved your picture from the web browser and opened it in photoshop. When I read the watermark, it's still telling me it contains Digimarc ID 892228, and that the rights are still restricted. Thank you...please come again.
enjoikr3wMar 1, 2007
Take a screenshot of the picture.
malliemcgMar 1, 2007
I'd find it more amusing to seed the intarweb with lots of false positives for them to get their knickers all in a twist.
switch22Mar 1, 2007
I've been a member longer than you...
ldkronosMar 1, 2007
@z0iidSorry. I saved your picture from the web browser and opened it in photoshop. When I read the watermark, it's still telling me it contains Digimarc ID 892228, and that the rights are still restricted. Thank you...please come again.
cryptoisfunMar 1, 2007
Steganography has been around longer than DRM.
mactardMar 1, 2007
Can it read a piece of a rar file?
z0iidMar 1, 2007
there, fixed. original link still works<a class="user" href="http://s13.c.jones.googlepages.com/test.jpg">http://s13.c.jones.googlepages.com/test.jpg</a>
bowelsMar 1, 2007
If water is added to these files, won't they get rusty?
ldkronosMar 5, 2007
well, that was a lot more than 13 minutes