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I have got this question from past exam papers and I can't figure out what it is trying to ask me to say...

The question is...

Explain the difference between HREF and IMG tags used in HTML document to link content held on other web sites, and describe potential of links for 'passing off'

What I don't get is HREF is not a HTML tag so am getting confused... Does anyone else understand what they mean?

Here is similar question from another past paper.

Discuss the use of HREF versus IMG tags in HTML to link content held on other web sites. Is there any difference, from a moral or legal perspective, concerning the usage of these two types? Provide an example of potential misuse of web links.

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Go over to Infolab and ask the lecturer- it isn't far to walk if you live on campus! Failing that Balpha's answer seems reasonable. – RichardOD Aug 24 at 9:39
Youy don't say where you are based, but in the UK at least, the national exam systems at secondary and tertiary level have become a national joke. So don't feel bad about not understanding the question - the examiner almost certainly didn't either. – Neil Butterworth Aug 24 at 9:39

2 Answers

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I guess what they want to hear about is the difference between linking to an image and displaying it inline ("hotlinking"). The wording is not totally correct, you're right, but especially the mentioning of a "moral or legal" perspective seems to hint at the question wether it's ok to hotlink an image on someone else's site.

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When thinking about hotlinking I think you could be right... But the wording makes it so confusing... – Aran Aug 24 at 9:36
HREF is not a tag at all, it's an attribute. The wording makes it sound just plain wrong to me. – Kawa Aug 24 at 9:56
@Kawa: Yeah, well... I guess "plain wrong" is a subset of "not totally correct" :-) – balpha Aug 24 at 10:02
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Perhaps they want you to discuss the difference between <a href="" /> and <img src="" />. One allows you to link to a website, which will load that remote content upon click, whereas the other allows you to load the remote content immediately. While linking with an anchor should have no legal issues, you may find problems loading people's images into your website without prior consent.

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