![]() I then use WinRar to archive the Notepad file and give the WinRar a basic password. I save them on notepad using a computer that is not connected to any network/internet. Hence, this is my methodology of saving/using passwords. I know and have heard of many keylogger/trojan and other methods of obtaining other peoples passwords. I have many passwords I need to remember, gmail, online banking, amazon…etc. Very interesting article! I am a software developer and a lil paranoid, generally ) You’re spending more time looking for a way to cheat than you would if you simply did the assignment exactly as requested. Regardless if there’s a way to tell or not, if your boss or your instructor asks you to type something in then type it in. On cheatingīy far the vast majority of comments on this article seem to be from individuals intent on cheating to complete some kind of typing assignment. In my opinion the chances of this are exceptionally slim. I have to say “theoretically”, since there’s actually nothing that prevents a program that knows about copy/paste to somehow include the information in its file format, either explicitly for some reason, or as a side effect of a complex file format. Once you have the data in your document or form, it’s just data with no real indication of its source. ![]() Theoretically the result of typing should be no different than the result of pasting that same text in. Proving it after the factīut can that involvement be detected or proven? When that happens the application absolutely is involved in processing the paste, and potentially transforming the data or its formatting according to whatever its own internal needs might be. There are so many different types of content and different types of formatted information, that the application needs to make some decisions as to exactly how to treat that data when it’s pasted in. On the other hand, some programs are deeply involved in the whole copy/paste process.Ī good example would be a word processor. In fact, it’s not even involved until everything is done and the person hits Enter, OK, or whatever. The program that’s receiving the data? It doesn’t know. When you’re typing into a field in a program or on a web page, it’s actually a Windows common control that handles character entry – whether something is copied to or pasted from the clipboard, being typed in, or some kind of combination. Many applications use Windows standard or common controls. In fact, many applications are simply not involved in the process whatsoever. Most programs really have no need to know or care about the difference. In an ideal world, the program would not know whether characters were typed in or pasted from the clipboard. ![]() The difference between typing and copying/pasting depends on the program that you’re using. ![]()
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