On Tue, Oct 02, 2007 at 12:45:58PM -0400, Celejar wrote: > On Mon, 01 Oct 2007 12:49:13 -0500 > John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > I wrote: > > > How are they doing this detection [of Acroread]? > > > > Celejar writes: > > > I don't know. > > > > I suggest you concentrate your efforts on finding out (and publish your > > results, of course). Once you can spoof their detection method you can get > > them to send you the files which you should be able to read despite the > > signature. Verifying the signature can come later. > > I installed the linux tarball (as a non-priveleged user, and to a > non-standard location under $HOME, to minimize pollution), and dropped > the plugin (nppdf.so) into $HOME/.mozilla/plugins (I'm using IW), which > was enough for the website to accept my system as having Acrobat > installed. I assume it was the plugin that did it, since I doubt there > were any heuristics that could have found the files I installed under > $HOME/some_location. > > Oddly enough, when I try to download PDFs from the institution's site, > the plugin doesn't pick them up, although IW recognizes them as "PDF > documents", and "about:plugins" shows Acrobat as being installed. [IW > only offers to open the PDFs with the default app (Evince) or to save > them to disk]. > > pdfinfo gives: > > > Producer: iText by lowagie.com (r1.02b;p128) > > CreationDate: Tue Oct 2 11:39:33 2007 > > ModDate: Tue Oct 2 11:39:33 2007 > > Tagged: no > > Pages: 4 > > Encrypted: no
they're not encrypted, so can you open them with evince/xpdf? I'm not sure what the problem is, I thought you were just trying to cross the hurdle of getting them to allow d/l. Or do you need to confirm the signatures? A
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