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| Junior Member | What is hotlinking and bandwidth theft? Bandwidth theft or "hotlinking" is direct linking to a web site's files (images, video, etc.). An example would be using an <img> tag to display a JPEG image you found on someone else's web page so it will appear on your own site, eBay auction listing, weblog, forum message post, etc. Bandwidth refers to the amount of data transferred from a web site to a user's computer. When you view a web page, you are using that site's bandwidth to display the files. Since web hosts charge based on the amount of data transferred, bandwidth is an issue. If a site is over its monthly bandwidth, it's billed for the extra data or taken offline. A simple analogy for bandwidth theft: Imagine a random stranger plugging into your electrical outlets, using your electricity without your consent, and you paying for it. How Do I know I am hotlinking? This is how you might display an image graphic file in the HTML on your own web page: HTML Code:
This tag tells the site to request the file image.jpg on the same server as the rest of the files on the site. If you were to hotlink an image from an outside server, the HTML might look like this: HTML Code:
This tag tells the site to request the image.jpg from a different server other than your own. Every time the page is loaded, the outside server has to use its bandwidth to display the image. To avoid this problem, don't link to files on servers that don't belong to you. To share images and files on your own web page, upload them to your own server's directory or to a free image hosting service that allows direct linking. Why should I stop hotlinking? Hotlinking can have a lot of undesirable consequences. One is the so-called "switcheroo". If you've linked to an image on someone's server, what's to prevent them from changing the image you linked to? This can have humorous results. Since most sites, forums, etc. have strict policies about offensive images, it wouldn't take much for an aggravated webmaster you've been stealing bandwidth from to shut you down completely with an unwanted "switcheroo". Displaying an image or file that doesn't belong to could be a violation of copyright, making you open to litigation. The owner of the file could utilize DMCA law to have your site shut down and your information given for use in legal proceedings. How can I test to see if my image can be hotlinked? Use our URL hotlink checker below to check the hotlinking protection (such as an htaccess file) on your web site. Enter the complete URL below (ex: http://mysite.com/image.jpg) to see if your image can be loaded and hotlinked by an outside server. Click to go to the Resource & Test Page ****************************************** ****************************************** ****************************************** Following text may not be an ultra professional experience but i've been using these techniques for 2 years and they are working great for me. I've been running two dedicated servers and i've full control over them (my .htaccess file lines included in my httpd.conf file). If your hosting is shared and got some restrictions to use .htaccess files on your account, you should contact your hosting company first to enable them. Notice: .htaccess files can only be used by Apache web servers and they will not work on a windows system. Hotlink Protection Enabled .htaccess File Tutorial -Create a new TXT file named *'sample.htaccess' and open it with your text editor (NotePad). *Windows users won't be able to create it as '.htaccess' so you have to rename 'sample.htaccess' to '.htaccess' after it's been uploaded to your server. -Copy and paste the following lines to 'sample.htaccess' file: Quote:
-Upload 'sample.htaccess' file to your web server's root and rename it to '.htaccess'. Read the following text to figure out how to customize your own .htaccess file. RewriteCond %{HTTP_REFERER} !^$ = Allow direct requests (ie. entering the url to an image in your browser). People can't publish your image files at their own web pages but they still can view them by entering their url in the browser window. These images can also be viewed (shared) by clicking on their urls in Instant Messenger windows. [NC] = "No Case", meaning match the url regardless of being in upper or lower case letters. [R] = Redirect *(jpg|jpeg|gif|png|bmp|swf) = Files to block I used to redirect blocked files to a custom .jpe image file. If you prefer this option, you should use the following .htaccess file: Quote:
Upload a tiny jpg file with a text on it like "Hotlinking is not allowed!" and change it's extension to .jpe. This JPEG image is using the extension jpe instead of jpg to prevent blocking your own replacement image. My .htaccess file: Quote:
This .htaccess file redirects people to my forum homepage who are trying to access the file types which are listed in the blocked files list. First piece of lines got RewriteCond %{HTTP_REFERER} !^$ line as i don't want people to be able to access those kind of files directly. (The protection for the image files doesn't have that line) If you don't want a redirection for (mp3|mpeg|mpg|ram|rm|wma|wav|asx|wmv|avi|mov|zip|r ar|exe), you can use replace that line with the following display your Error Code 404 page: Quote:
Example: 404 - MsXLabs .htaccess files effect the folder it's in and all of the subfolders. If you want to exclude a subfolder from the hotlink protection, create another .htaccess file with the lines below and upload it to that directory: Quote:
IMPORTANT NOTE: PLEASE DELETE ANY EXTRA SPACES ADDED BY VBULLETIN. (jpg|jpeg|gif|png|bmp|swf) THERE SHOULD'T BE ANY SPACES BETWEEN THE EXTENSION TYPES. Feel free to reply this thread if i made some mistakes :rolleyes: This tutorial is written by NeutralizeR @ MsXLabs Organization Original Thread | |||||
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Hull, United Kingdom.
Posts: 317
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Hi there, In cPanel I'm sure there is a feature which makes this process a lot easier. I have had a break from being a webmaster so I am forgetting quite a lot so correct me of I'm wrong. Thanks for the tutorial anyway I'm sure a lot of people will learn a lot from this. Regards, Kieran Taylor. |
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| | #3 |
| Contributor Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Denver
Posts: 4,459
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Thanks for the good information. Would it be possible to completely pull a hotlinkers visitor into my own site using .htaccess? I mean, instead of sending them the .jpe file, could you send them a webpage with your own links on it? |
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| | #4 | ||||
| Junior Member | Quote:
Yes, i used cPanel's hotlink protection feature,too. But cPanel doesn't give you this much customization and this way it's a more flexible solution. Quote:
Of course, first sample redirects to your forum home. Quote:
You can replace it with any url in your domain. This image is located in a hotlink protected directory: ------- > It must be broken here. (Hotlink protected with forum home redirection)This line allows it to be viewed by an empty referrer: Quote:
http://www.msxlabs.org/images/acting...sxlabs.com.gif Once it's cached by your browser, you can view the image above in this post, too. I used to redirect hotlink protected image files to a small gif file which was located in a non-hotlink protected directory: ![]() Non-image files are always being redirected to my forum homepage. Last edited 07-26-2006 at 02:13 PM. | ||||
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| | #5 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Hull, United Kingdom.
Posts: 317
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Hi there, If you ever have any other tutorials please post them, as I always want more things to read and learn. Regards, Kieran Taylor. |
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| | #6 | |
| Junior Member | Quote:
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| | #7 |
| Senior Member Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Hull, United Kingdom.
Posts: 317
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() | Hi there, Cool, thank you. Regards, Kieran Taylor. |
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