Yeah. You can prevent that too with a CSS property, but again, it’s not the default; you have to have enough time and attention to detail to go out of your way and handle it
My favorite feature in recent iOS is that you can defeat that CSS property by taking a screenshot and letting the phone OCR the image, then copy paste from the result.
Disabling copy is abused by all sorts of apps. (Yelp street addresses are a prime offender.).
I’m not convinced allowing it to be disabled is a net positive.
It’s fairly essential for things like buttons and tabs that get tapped all the time and have mostly non-content text. But it does need to be used sparingly
Disabling copy is abused by all sorts of apps. (Yelp street addresses are a prime offender.).
I’m not convinced allowing it to be disabled is a net positive.