On Friday, May 4, 2012, at 12:37 Malte Stien wrote:
Hi all,
Is there a way I can get ConTeXt to produce PDFs that are not-printable? Just as a background to my question: This is not about copyright. Rather, I am using ConTeXt to produce quality process documents. The quality management system requires that all quality process documents be "controlled", that is one must prevent folks from printing copies of their own that then keep floating around the place and cannot be retracted when a new version of the quality process document is issued.
Hence, I am aiming for a paper-less scenario where everyone reads the documents on screen. Therefore, I would like to make printing impossible, or at least hard. The only one who should be able to print the document is the Document Manager; maybe the documents could be encrypted (PDF supports that, I believe), such that the Document Manager can print them knowing the password.
So far, I have only seen Word and Acrobat Distiller being able to do this. Is there a way I can setup ConTeXt to do this? Or are there some command line tools, that can do that after the PDF has been produced?
Any hints would be great. Thank you, Malte.
You can accomplish PDF encryption with pdftk (for example): http://www.pdflabs.com/tools/pdftk-the-pdf-toolkit/ You use that to restrict certain features (in your case printing) and protect that restriction with a password. The PDF itself can still be read without password. Of course the PDF viewer has to honor that restriction. If the user finds a PDF viewer that doesn't give a **** about these restrictions, they can still print it. But I think that doesn't really matter for your scenario anyway. :-) -- Best Regards, Andreas