HiWhen using the corel capture on the web is it legal or is it an infringement committed
TheSign Guy said: Giulio If it's for your on use you wouldn't have a problem in the states. George
Giulio If it's for your on use you wouldn't have a problem in the states.
George
George it's nice to know, what was corel capture developed for.
It has been around a log time, And I just think it was made in case I went off on the Wild side and needed to be brought back. Probably for the net or other programs that you may need a peace of it.
Giulio said:what was corel capture developed for.
It has many uses, but a particular example is most of the screenshots in the messages I've posted in recent months. I use area capture to mark the screen area, a copy of that area pops up in CorelDraw ready to be marked up with notes and instructions, and then exported to a bitmap to appear in the forum.
Capture is not actually needed for images from web pages -- you could equally well drag the image from the screen into a folder or even straight into CorelDraw. But if you had a web page where several images appear as a group and you want to save the group as a single image, capture would do that. With drag and drop, you would have to save them as individual images and then reassemble them to make a group.
harryLondon said:
Interesting to know of the drag and dropbut would the other party know that you have done that operation
I don't think it would know.
When your browser first visits the site, the browser will download the image to display on the page. The site you download it from would log your IP address for its statistics, but that is exactly the same as anybody else visiting the site.
When you drag and drop into a program, the browser already has the image and would serve it from memory or the browser cache -- so the site would probably not know about the second access.