The below information is only for the purpose of Fair Use. The workaround is suggested because you already own the rights to the document but its overzealous creators restricted you more than they should. Your first workaround should be to contact the creator of the document to relax the restrictions. If you do not have the rights to the document, it is probably illegal for you to apply any of the suggested methods below. Check with your lawyer.
If you find yourself with a protected PDF (or what some people call “DRM-ed”), there’s a way to get around this. It’s not very elegant, but it works.
Here’s what the document properties window will look like, for a protected pdf, besides the “Lock” icon on your bottom left of Acrobat.
As you can see, it’s very restrictive. I cannot even cut-and-paste.
To work around this, you need to be able to print, which is allowed in my case. You need to print to a new file. Since I’m using Microsoft Windows, I’ve the Microsoft Office Document Image Writer.
1) Print to Microsoft Office Document Image Writer. If you don’t know what I’m talking about, from your print dialog window, choose the Image Writer. It’s pretty obvious if you’re on Windows. For other platforms, you probably have your own workaround, like Mac OSX pdf printing function.
2) Open the .mdi file created. From there, print to your PDF writer, like CutePDF.
3) Open the newly created PDF file and see the document security settings removed and everything else intact.
Note: Printing to a PDF writer directly, like CutePDF, does not work. Adobe probably realised this simple workaround and did something about it. You need to print/convert to another format, in this case the .mdi format, before printing/converting back to pdf format again.
Alternatively, you can try this suggestion here that uses Gmail as a workaround and metioned on Boing Boing. It doesn’t work as well as all methods above, but it’s definitely cross-platform.
Happy Fair Use-ing.
May 17th, 2006 at 5:53 am
Kelvin,
Good info about using the MS Office Doc Image Writer…. I have the program installed on my system but not the print driver.
Why? I do not know.
Any idea where to get it or how to install it?
(I’m using a hand-me-down laptop.)
I’ve searched MS’s site extensively.. and googled it as well… not much luck.
Any ideas??
~DA
July 29th, 2006 at 1:22 pm
Great, worked like a charm!
I was upset with having to install DRM on all my computers.
Thanks a lot
August 18th, 2006 at 3:39 am
Doesn’t work, says printer is not allowed for secure printing.
August 18th, 2006 at 2:55 pm
Jimbo, if you leave an email, I’ll probably be able to help you.
September 17th, 2006 at 6:15 am
works like a dream… good tip, have gigs of eBooks to process…can I perl it and batch my pdf’s? …thanks for the workaround.
Worthy of mention: when printing to a file, and you’ve selected Microsoft Office Document Image Writer as your “printer” make sure to click on the properties button, then advanced, and uncheck the “compress images option”, otherwise the output will be really poor: remember, each page is essentially and image. I have Acrobat 6.0 Professional and could then select Adobe PDF as a printer from the MS Document Image Writer application, producing the pdf without those pesky DRM security features.
December 13th, 2006 at 2:11 am
Also when using Acrobat 7, make sure to uncheck the “Do Not Send Fonts to Acrobat” option box when printing to PDF from the MDIW. The box is available from the Print Properties box when printing.
January 10th, 2007 at 2:15 pm
i am not able to print..as it say protected..how am i going to unlock the security? thanks a million.
January 12th, 2007 at 4:48 pm
I have the same Q as steve. I just bought an ebook for $60 and can only print 25 pages a week, or copy 5 sections a week. I’ve been looking all night for a way to remove the drm or owner passwords, something to let me use this $60 book I bought. I’m irked
January 13th, 2007 at 8:35 pm
I’ve had success I’d like to share with anyone who might run in to this page and have the same question in the future. Adobe is tricky, but what I found was that microsoft office image writer worked great to print the ebook to either mdi or tif format.
The problem next was the fact that my ebook only allowed me to print 25 pages a week (printing to any pdf printer resulted in errors with adobe pdf printer, or blank pages with any other pdf printer; only ms office image writer worked). To bypass this 25pg/wk limit, I used VMWARE Workstation. with vmware I installed a virtual copy of windows XP. I put the ebook and reader on the virtual windows and activated it. I had to install office 2003 to install the image writer.
At that point I took a snapshot of the system in a good state with the image writer, activated reader and working ebook with the full 25pg/wk limit. I printed 25 pages to the image writer in to TIF format, then put that tif on a flash drive. I restored to the snapshot and had an untouched system, with the full 25page print limit again. I printed the next 25 pages, then restored to the snapshot, print 25 more, and continued until all 400 were done.
You’ll end up with a bunch of 25 page tifs or mdis depending what you want. If you have the full acrobat pro installed, it is capable of converting the tifs and giving you one single PDF file very simply. I’m sure there are plenty of other programs on the net, though, to convert to pdf and then merge in to one. I found acrobat pro the easiest one step process to do this.
I finally have a clean ebook I can use however I want. I’m pretty happy, it only took a day and a half to figure out. Hope this helps someone in the future if they run in to a very secured and restricted ebook like I.
January 13th, 2007 at 8:50 pm
Brian, thanks for the detailed writeup! I was thinking if there will be an alternative to installing XP on VMWare? It certainly won’t be easy for those who are not as tech savvy.
January 17th, 2007 at 4:00 am
Kelvin,
Did you ever find the fix for the question on secure printing? When I choose Docoument Image writer as a printer for DRM pdfs I get the message “This printer is not allowed for secure printing.” It works fine for regular PDFs. Thanks.
March 7th, 2007 at 5:31 am
Drew,
I had the same problem as you with “this printer is not allowed with secure printing”.
The following worked for me:
Go to http://www.zan1011.com/ and download the Zan image printer. This is an opensource driver.
In the config, choose printer redirect and then hook off your prefered pdf writer. It even works with adobe writer.
Your result is a “graphical” pdf file with no restrictions and you can run OCR if necessary..
March 23rd, 2007 at 9:04 am
I couldn’t get any of the above remedies to work but I was able to get Gadwin Printscreen (free) to copy it - then send the output direct to my printer. Turn off cursor capture in options.
http://www.gadwin.com/printscreen/
Page was about 5% reduced in size with a line around some sides of it, but very well usable. Maybe a bit clunky but it worked.
June 9th, 2007 at 10:52 pm
PDF file is having no permission to print.
Is there any workaround for printing such a file. It doesnt even allow copy paste and its having 220 pages.
any way to print this doc??
Any suggestions/workaround for such issue s
July 1st, 2007 at 12:52 pm
Thanks Heaps - Worked a treat…
October 21st, 2007 at 9:30 am
Thanks Axl - I tried everything and about gave up until I found your Zan driver recommendation. Worked really well.
March 18th, 2008 at 8:05 am
Works like a charm!! YOU ARE MY HERO!!
April 4th, 2008 at 4:14 am
The Zan suggestion saved the day!
June 13th, 2008 at 3:06 pm
This is very useful; in some cases though Adobe Acrobat Reader might refuse to print to MDI or PS printer, saying “The printer is not allowed for secure printing. Do you want to change your choice ?”.
You can work around this limitation by installing a printer port redirection tool such as RedMon:
http://pages.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/redmon/
June 18th, 2008 at 3:43 pm
is easy to open pdf with security issue (i mean can not cut, copy or print), just
1. open ie go to address http://www.ensode.net/pdf-crack.jsf
2. check agree and submint your files
3. it will automatic open new windows and save file as = pdf-crack.jsf
4. rename the file form jsf to pdf (pdf-crack.pdf)
now you can open the file to print or anything
br
al.hermansyah@gmail.com
October 29th, 2008 at 2:50 pm
The security protections are easy to defeat - use PDF Password Remover 3.0 or Elcomsoft Advanced PDF Password Recovery.
The true problem is with third-party plugins like FileOpen - anyone has got a tool that could remove such a protection?
December 26th, 2008 at 7:45 pm
Thanks! this is very informative
regards,
Joe
1 step system
January 28th, 2009 at 9:47 am
Very helpful indeed. My graduate program forces us to purchase exorbitantly expensive yet completely crippled PDFs published by the Harvard Business School (and sold through www.xanedu.com). The DRM protection is indeed FileOpen, which I was not able to find a solution for. I was also getting the “printer is not allowed for secure printing” error reported by others in this thread.
Zan Image Printer does indeed get around FileOpen. Contrary to Axl’s original comment (#12), I was able to print to image without having any other PDF writer installed on my machine (and without enabling the “Printer Redirection” feature in Zan). I suppose Your Miles May Vary, but to help others that will get to this page, here are the full instructions:
1) Download and install Zan Image Printer (it does appear to be a 30 day trial).
2) Open your DRM’ed PDF and print it.
3) For printer, select “Zan Image Printer(bw)” and hit “OK”
4) A window will come up. Under the “Image” tab select the output file format (PDF might be a good idea).
5)Under the “Save” tab, select the location where you’d like the output file to be saved to.
6) Print the document.
February 19th, 2009 at 6:07 am
I tried Zen’s printer. It’s pritty good but it produces non vector-graphic output.
Does anyone have suggestion(s) how to get vector-graphic result? I have XPS printer and MS office 2007 and Adobe CS3 with acrobat prof of course. (If I try to use XPS printer it says “this printer is not allowed with secure printing”, the same with adobe pdf printer, pdf creator… I have Adobe PS too, but if I try to send the output, “this…” comes up again. I tried Bullzip too. Adobe allows to print on it, but at the end(?) of the printing procedure Bullzip says PDF comes from an encrypted format and cannot save.)
February 26th, 2009 at 1:42 am
I have run into quite a few PDFs that give the
“This printer is not allowed for secure printing.” warning. I have found that if I print the PDF to PDF Filler Software; then once it is opened in PDF FILLER I print it to CutePDF Software it will save as a normal PDF.
I can then do what I want with the PDF file.
Note: If you have an unregistered (demo) version of PDF Filler then it will print each page with their logo on the top.
May 22nd, 2009 at 9:20 pm
The ihatedrm site has some useful info on bypassing drm on vitrium protectedpdf files http://www.ihatedrm.com/cs2/forums/thread/12233.aspx
May 22nd, 2009 at 9:29 pm
For FileOpen see http://girtby.net/archives/2005/02/03/fileopen-are-wankers/
August 17th, 2009 at 5:56 am
ZEN printer works great!
Thanks
January 11th, 2010 at 9:04 pm
And what about FileOpen 128-bit v2? Have such PDF withou any luck to “decrypt” it. (I have rights for it, but only for 1 pc)