My only conclusion is is that some banks use some feature built in PDF Readers to prevent the printing of a PDF, by covering parts with black bars.

The issue does not appear when using other software like Adobe Reader or Microsoft Edge, to print the PDF.

Is this a form of DRM? I want to know how it works whatever is causing it, and be able to remove it from the PDF itself completely.

Why does Firefox obey this DRM crap, while Edge has the balls to ignore it?

  • @yokonzo
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    3 months ago

    Didn’t see that part, what is the issue then exactly if you have a way to print the pdf without DRM?

    • @[email protected]OP
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      3 months ago

      It’s weird and dumb and I wanna remove it regardless so I can print it with any program I want. Plus I wanna understand how it works and by what feature it’s done, and if it’s possible to turn that feature off in Firefox that is supposed to be for the people. Chrome I understand, they can fuck off

      • @yokonzo
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        3 months ago

        Oh I can understand that, i too cannot accept anything less than total dominion over my devices. Well if this is a firefox specific feature, the only way I could think to access that toggle would be by typing about:config into your search bar and seeing if you can find whichever setting controls this and changing it to false. You know, just be careful though rooting around the guts of your browser.

        • @[email protected]OP
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          13 months ago

          Chrome acts the same way. Edge and Adobe (on windows at least) ignore this security thing. But if the setting is present in about:config at all, it’d be finding a needle in a haystack. I’m surprised I couldn’t find anything on the internet. If you don’t know the name, it’s impossible to find I guess. To make things even worse, I am able to print the PDF fine on another computer, using the exact same OS, browser, and printer.