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    #16
    Martin - could you please repost your latest code for other CLARA users .... I tried this last year on CLARA and they told me they did not accept mod rewrites


    Bikster
    SellerDeck Designs and Responsive Themes

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      #17
      Cool, I'm glad you got it working Martin.

      17 to go - jont...

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        #18
        Hi Jont

        OK, this is what I added to the end of my .htaccess (including a blank line first to seperate from rest of the instructions in there).

        RewriteEngine on
        RewriteCond %{HTTP_REFERER} !^$
        RewriteCond %{HTTP_REFERER} !^http://(www\.)?megacitycomics\.\co\.uk/.*$ [NC]
        RewriteRule \.(gif|jpg|js|css)$ - [F]

        Note the .\co\.uk which I did myself by trial and error and mucho reading htaccess/apache help files (I'm a real novice at this type of stuff).
        Most code was showing mysite\.com and Jo's surfwax code (at the start of this thread) shows mysite\.co.uk.
        Maybe its not crucial, but the reading I did seemed to suggest you need a backslash before each period, to mean 'take as literal character', as the period is itself an apache instruction.

        I had previously tried placing these lines (and variations thereof) at the start of the file, and that caused me no end of problems, by locking me out of my own site, and denying access to the whole site for everyone!

        The changes had no effect (I wasted a whole afternoon trying different versions) - as Jo had said - they probably weren't allowing mod rewrites.

        I emailed business support asking if they allowed mod rewrites and raised a ticket (I also tried phoning, but the helpdesk guy didn't seem to know what a mod rewrite was!).
        Anyway, on testing this morning, by checking out some of my biggest hotlinkers, all the hotlink pics were no longer showing and my logs confirmed no more myspace linkers! Hurray!
        Support haven't replied to my email, but I am assuming that they switched on mod rewrites for me (or whatever they do to activate it).

        I shall monitor the situation over the next few days, as i am interested as anyone to see if this saves me much bandwidth, and/or loses me any business.

        I did always wonder why the vast majority of my bandwidth was devoted to America, when my customer base is primarily UK, but maybe its not that simple.

        Hope that helps

        Martin

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          #19
          Talk about 'the kiss of death'!
          No sooner do I post, than my mod rewrites have gone again!
          First hotlink of the day 17:56.
          Those that were blocked are now happily back hotlinked to my images again.
          Have re emailed Clara, and await a response
          Will keep you posted

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            #20
            Talk about raising my hopes with the first post and then crashing me back down again with the second

            Seem to recall this happened previously with CLARA whereby it was then wasn't working ... for no apparent reason.

            *****
            Just dug out this email from CLARA dated 18th Nov 2005

            Dear John,

            Unfortunately we do not have any suggestions for others to stop other customers hotlinking to you website.

            Please do not hesitate to contact us if you require any further
            assistance.

            Kind regards,

            Intakhab Raja

            **************

            Hopefully something will have changed on their servers since then


            Bikster
            SellerDeck Designs and Responsive Themes

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              #21
              OK, for Jont and anyone else interested, Claranet eventually responded with:

              "Unfortunately you are not permited to define your own rewrite rules on
              Clarahost (beyond (sub)domain redirects, which you can setup in the
              DMS page"

              I'll chalk that one up to a few days wasted effort then, and continue letting my bandwidth usage leech away...

              I assume that if I get around to taking on a managed dedicated server I can do what I like, and will be able to rewrite....although then it will be less of a need as likley to have unlimited bandwidth!!

              Martin

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                #22
                Thanks Martin - basically the same response I had last November

                You can still resort to renaming the stolen images to something else and using a monster file with the old filename to provide some temporary fight back


                Bikster
                SellerDeck Designs and Responsive Themes

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                  #23
                  John

                  Carried out a few 'hits back' to the worst offenders (those chalking up in excess of 300 hits pm on single pics), but nothing malicious.
                  I figure I can't gain anything much by temporarily killing their site with a whopper gif (though I was tempted ), but I can get some 'free' advertising by switching an image over to an ad for my site.

                  The problem is we have so many damn images (must be in excess of 10,000) that its a crazy task to try and keep replacing all the leeched ones.
                  Plus, its a lot of effort to track down the myspacers (who combined are notching up in excess of 20,000 image hits to my site pm!!), as the link via the stats page dosen't take you direct to the offender - you need to fish through the logs, which is a silly waste of time (yup, I did it for 2 days, and its both silly and a waste of time !!!).

                  One thing I really should do is clear off unused images from the server, as I did find images that we no longer need.
                  The products we sell change fairly often, so the server is littered with unused images for products we no longer sell, yet still have legacy hotlinks to them.

                  Am I correct in thinking that its simple to just delete all of the jpgs from my server space, then perform a site refresh, or am I overlooking something, and is there any danger to this that you can highlight, before I go ahead?

                  Martin (fighting a losing battle against the dark forces of myspace et al)

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                    #24
                    How about renaming the acatalog folder online as a backup, then creating a new acatalog folder and doing a purge and refresh.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      I'd download all the images from the webspace to HD (and them store them somewhere safe).

                      Then delete all images from the webspace and upload.

                      Duncan's solution requires more care as you would need to download order files.ord.occ etc etc, backup your ordernumber file and so on..

                      Comment


                        #26
                        Thanks Duncan & Jo

                        Haven't got the purge and whatsit facility on the live site, as that is currently on Act5 (site rebuilding with Bus7, but not yet switched over).

                        Will follow your advice Jo.
                        From what you are saying, am I correct in thinking then after I have deleted the images, the software will pick up which images are missing and still needed, by looking at whats phyically on the server, rather than looking at the local database for a 'picture already uploaded' flag?

                        thanks again

                        Martin

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                          #27
                          Originally posted by fleetwood
                          am I correct in thinking then after I have deleted the images, the software will pick up which images are missing and still needed
                          Yes, it will then only upload the images referenced live in Actinic


                          Bikster
                          SellerDeck Designs and Responsive Themes

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                            #28
                            and images referenced in "additional files"

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                              #29
                              Would it help if images are named differently - i.e. an image named captainfantastic.gif, could be called cptfan.gif. It might stop people who are googling for images as opposed to a regular search.
                              (Don't shoot me down for a non-techie suggestion!)
                              Nick
                              Trying to squeeze my moneys worth out of V7 - but not for much longer!

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                                #30
                                (Don't shoot me down for a non-techie suggestion!)
                                a different solution and one that is less time consuming is to add the following lines to your robots.txt file

                                Disallow: /*.gif$
                                Disallow: /*.jpg$
                                This prevents spiders from indexing your images in the first place

                                it won't prevent the issue we are talking about which is preventing people from using your images, but it is another step to make it a little bit more difficult

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