[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
[ARSCLIST] OT: Copyright and typefaces
Copyright can be asserted for both PostScript and TrueType fonts: 
PostScript is printable and subject to human interpretation; TrueType is 
an executable program. Needless to say, the commercial faces have 
copyright notices in readable form within their headers.
The oddity arises when one uses a program to construct a font of one's 
own. I have used several such and each has embedded a copyright notice 
in the product - asserting that the rights belong to the publisher of 
the program used. It's as though Shure had the rights to a recording 
made with their microphones.
Since the PostScript file can be edited with a text editor, one could 
easily change the notice to assert rights of the person who created it - 
but is that legal? I wonder whether the original assertion is valid.
Mike
--
mrichter@xxxxxxx
http://www.mrichter.com/