Spellchecking in CKEditor? Is your data safe?

Presseveröffentlichung: CKeditor SpellCheck


Publisher: Nanospell

Security of data within a spellchecker is a major concern for any business or individual who want to have their confidential information kept safe. Traditionally, spell-check plugins for CKEditor / FCKEditor have sent data off-site to Google or other commercial service providers for the spell-checker to be run. That means that every time an online file or document was spell-checked - the entire document was sent to a 3rd party across the Internet! The SpellCheck plug-in for CKEditor from NanoSpell is different, all spellchecking is performed on your own server - behind your own firewall. The security advantages are clear for any enterprise with a secure intranet, extranet or admin login area on their website. Nanospell"s spell-checking technology is almost platform independent. It installs on Linux, "OS X", UNIX, Windows and BSD operating systems. It can also support any of the following web servers: Apache, NginX, TomCat, WebSpehere, and Microsoft Windows IIS. The back en language it support included PHP, ASP (Active Server Pages VBScript), ASP.Net (C#, VB.Net and more) and Java. CKEditor spell-check also fully supports MVC including PHP frameworks and the Microsoft .Net MVC framework versions 1-5. To install you just upload, run getstarted.html and go. You can discover more information on installing the NanoSpell "CKEditor SpellCheck" plug-in at http://ckeditor-spellcheck.nanospell.com/how-to-install online. Integration is easy and takes only a few lines of javascript code. NanoSpell is also broadly compatible - and supports all the browser s with CKEditor 4 support - including: Internet Explorer (IE 8,IE 9,IE 9 Quirks Mode ,IE10 & IE 11), Opera, WebKit, OS X and iOS Safari, Google Chrome and Mozilla FireFox! Full server and browser compatibility is list at http://ckeditor-spellcheck.nanospell.com/how-to-install#compatibility for your reference. CKEditor"s built in spellcheck-as-you-type (SCAYT) functionality is not lacking - but by default is paid for by popup commercial adverts from the Google ad network. This is OK for public free usage - but may violate security and privacy requirements within an Internet Adverts loading with javascript may also be profiling users and potentially reporting back web page contents to the advertising network. In addition - it can look very unprofessional for a developer to produce an intarnet or admin app with advert pop-ups all over the pace for their client to see. API Options also include the ability for you as the developer to control dictionary language, server technology and how to interpret UPPER CASE and Alph4Numer1c words. As a developer you probably want to see an example of CKEditor SpellChecker for yourself - so why not try a free online demo with source-code at http://ckeditor-spellcheck.nanospell.com/#try . Happy Coding!

Source: http://ckeditor-spellcheck.nanospell.com/