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Posted by Harlan Messinger on 05/31/07 14:29
dorayme wrote:
> In article <5c36huF2s86imU1@mid.individual.net>,
> Harlan Messinger <hmessinger.removethis@comcast.net> wrote:
>
>> ad@albert-dominguez.de wrote:
>>> Hiding HTML source code is possible. It requires JavaScript, but there
>>> is no need to encrypt HTML output or do anything else which would
>>> decrease performance. I discovered this about five years ago, but at
>>> that time it would have been considered bad practice in regards to
>>> cross-browser-compatibility. Now that AJAX has become a programming
>>> standard, the time has come to let this loose on the the public. I
>>> won't tell you how I do it, but I will provide you with a working
>>> example.
>>>
>>> http://www.smart-cgi.com/api/
>>>
>>> If anyone is able to crack this, I would appreciate the feedback.
>> Firefox's DOM Inspector--from the context menu for the HTML element,
>> Copy XML to get the following on the Windows clipboard:
>>
>> <HTML lang="en" dir="ltr" xml:lang="en"
>> xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml">
>> <HEAD>
>> <SCRIPT type="text/javascript" src="./js.js"/>
>> <TITLE>
>> Smart-CGI.com </TITL ...
>
> etc
>
> On FF 2.0.0.3 on Mac, this technique gets only this on the Mac
> clipboard:
>
> <HTML>
> <HEAD>
> <SCRIPT type="text/javascript" src="./js.js"/>
> </HEAD>
> <BODY/>
> </HTML>
>
Does the DOM Inspector at least show the more detailed structure in the
tree diagram? If so, you can probably get the code behind the elements
that appear in the tree but that aren't included in the above snippet of
code.
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