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Yahoo! and! Adobe! sign! ad-packed! PDF! pact!29 Nov 2007 15:54 Acrobat Reader to display 'message from our sponsor'FoxitBy DeFex
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 16:05 GMT
good thing there are alternative, free, faster, and less annoying PDF viewers. Surprised ?By Dam
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 16:30 GMT
Anyone here that didn't see it coming, given the quasi _monopoly_ Adobe has on PDF ? orBy Daniel Snowden
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 16:35 GMT
Evince is starting to look much more appealing Well, it made me look closely at Adobe ReaderBy Sean Ellis
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 16:36 GMT
Specifically, replacing it with something like Sumatra as soon as possible. Plenty of alternativesBy Michael Sheils
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 16:43 GMT
Windoze users can have foxit reader, Linux crowd have plenty of alternatives, like evince. They're gonna have to update PDF so it breaks the reader, first...By Keith Doyle
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 17:17 GMT
...I knew there was a reason I haven't been allowing my acrobat reader to auto-update itself... Evince?By Colin Guthrie
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 17:26 GMT
While predominantly a Gnome users, I have to say Evince sucks.... kpdf is far, far nicer. Adobe Reader?By yeah, right.
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 18:24 GMT
People still use Adobe Reader? I've found that it became pure unusable bloatware several versions ago, and have gone to several other PDF readers long since (which one depends on which O/S and what context). Since PDF document reader programs are barred from network access on my system, should prove interesting to see if they try to download anything, or if the advert is embedded into the PDF itself when it is created. Yet another argument for FOSS in my eyes, then such advert placement can be stripped out easily enough. Privacy BreachBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 20:56 GMT
How many sensitive financial documents are transmitted as a PDF file? Think of the privacy implications of searching that for keywords... Emphasis on Optional...By Gareth
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 22:16 GMT
"Unless you actually want your monthly departmental financial analysis review PDF content linked to adverts for 30 per cent off stationery and offers to slash the cost of your medical bills." Uh, doesn't the article state that the ads are optional for the advertiser and have to be inserted through an extra step in the PDF creation process? This development is only really of use to information product publishers/ebook hawkers who make their products public/for profit than people rendering PDFs for internal distribution... and a lot of those documents already contain advertising. Another vote for KPDFBy Nexox Enigma
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 22:28 GMT
I haven't used (or heard of Evince,) but kpdf is just about the most useful pdf reader that I've come across on any platform. I especially love how it renders pages in stages so that my slow computers can still scroll at full speed, then I can pause and let the page that I want come out clearly. The only downside that I can really see is that I've got to compile the entire KDE Graphics suite to get KPDF, which spends lots of times on apps that I don't have any interest in running. Just use Foxit insteadBy Anonymous Coward
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 22:44 GMT
You people are still using Adobe Reader, huh? By removing Adobe and installing Foxit across a 600+ PC domain I: - improved responsiveness - reduced support calls - increased happiness - made the world a nicer place And no, I don't work for them. You can get it from www.foxitsoftware.com it's free, it's fast, it's a hell of a lot smaller than Adobe's shitware, and it doesn't break your file associations, either. nice-- download a PDF,By Rick Stockton
Posted Thursday 29th November 2007 22:57 GMT
you've got a Trojan phoning home with "keywords". Blanket ban on Adobe productsBy The Sceptic
Posted Friday 30th November 2007 15:36 GMT
Working within secure networks this has the potential of a security breach. This is very simple for me - If adobe start pumping uncensored materials to our network we will simply migrate. This is a single point of access for many computers from a hackers point of view, just not worth the risk especially with the other PDF attacks which have be discovered. A sign maybe of just desperate Adobe are becoming - maybe its time to jump ship before it sinks!!! The period for commenting on this story has finished |
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