
Ownership Of Font Styles? 10
jesse.k asks: "I'm curious about the copyright ownership of typefaces, specifically homemade copies of commercial faces. I've seen a great deal of fonts made to look like popular movie logos (Bladerunner, Fight Club, Star Wars, The Matrix), and I was wondering what is the legality of this? If one creates a similar looking font from scratch, does this fall under fair use? If one decides to distribute the font, what type of legal issues would it face, even if it is distributed in non-profit manner?
I ask this, because even respectable free font archives on the Internet always seem to have at least a couple derivative fonts."
Foant uses (Score:1)
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FIGHT FIRST POST LOSERS! KEEP IT INFORMATIVE!!
Fonts are treated specially (Score:3)
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Re:Fonts are treated specially (Score:1)
Re:Copyright == Copyright != Fair Use (Score:1)
Ralf
The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.
Scanning in fonts? (Score:1)
Ethics and Issues Relating to Type (Score:3)
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Fonts are art works (Score:3)
Fonts are art works. Every letter gets tweaked and mooshed and adjusted. Letter pairs are sometimes handled specially (ligatures) like the fi combination in many fonts lets the dot in the "i" smear into the "f". Most of the "copycat" fonts shoot for the same looks but are quite different when directly compared.
Too good of a knockoff CAN get you sued. Adobe suit [creativepro.com] or this one Adobe again [allcompu.com] and more on [allcompu.com] that second one.
The copyright issue isn't fixed but it _is_ getting there. Shameful that we protect other things way too far and this so little.
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Re:Fonts are treated specially (Score:2)
It is illegal to make a derivative digital copy of a font file without permission from the copyright holder.
This covers such dubious practises as importing a font in fontographer, scaling all the glyphs by %101, and saving it as a new file.
For more information, check out TypeRight.Org [typeright.org].
Coverage of a ruling in this regard is at Internet Type Foundry Index [typeindex.com].
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Copyright == Copyright != Fair Use (Score:1)
If one decides to distribute Microsoft Windows 2000, what type of legal issues would one face, even if it is distributed in non-profit manner?
See the similarities?
Re:Fonts are art works (Score:4)
Typefaces are viewed by US law as a utilitarian device, much like a pencil or hammer, and do not meet current copyright guidelines.
There you have it. I suppose back when metallic typefaces were in widespread usage they could have seemed a lot more analgous to a hammer or pencil, but it's pretty obvious that that argument is irrelevant now.
Adobe did not technically win the suits that you mention on the basis that their fonts are copyrightable - they won it because the defendant infringed on their "font software". IANAL, but I think that this was just some sort of fancy legal doublespeak or maneuvering since software obviously is copyrightable. I do remember reading that the distinction was an important one, because the judge, by using the "font software" term, set no precident for fonts themselves being copyrightable.
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