By Ryan
Naraine
December 23, 2005
Adobe Systems Inc. wants you to know when your
PDF documents are being tracked.
The company's Acrobat and Reader software
products have been updated to give users a pop-up warning when a document that
is tagged for tracking attempts to make a connection to a Web service.
Adobe Director of Security Solutions John
Landwehr confirmed that the feature has been added to version 7.05 of the two
products in order to offer "security and privacy" to PDF users.
"As Web services become more and more
pervasive and new technologies get deployed, it's important to look at the
security and privacy implications of desktop applications communicating over a
network," Landwehr said in an interview with eWEEK.
Adobe plugs code
execution holes. Click here to read more.
The new feature appears to have been created
in response to Toronto-based company Remote Approach Inc.'s online service for
tagging and
tracking PDF files.
Remote Approach's online service lets
businesses tag PDF files for distribution. When the PDF is read, it interacts
with a network service to record the event and create reports on the movement of
the document.
However, with the Adobe update, the end user
will receive a pop-up dialog box every time the PDF file attempts to make a
connection with a Web service.
Read details here about online tracking of Office documents from
NextPage.
"It's designed to alert the user that the
application has been requested to make such a call and give the user the choice
whether to make the network call or not," Landwehr said.
Read the full story on PDFzone:
Adobe Flags Online PDF Tracking
Check out eWEEK.com's
Content Creation
Center for the latest news, reviews and analysis
on image editing and Web publishing tools.
|