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From: | Pen-Yuan Hsing |
Subject: | [libreplanet-discuss] Properly attributing free fonts? |
Date: | Mon, 2 Nov 2015 14:30:28 +0000 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10.11; rv:38.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/38.3.0 |
Hello again,As I understand it, fonts also fall under the realm of what free software cares about. (please correct me if I'm wrong!)
Regarding that, I notice that in almost all cases, software (or any other material like documents or posters) don't provide attribution for the fonts they used. Is this normal? Or is this a matter of which license the font uses? Is there a "proper" way to provide font attribution, whether in a web page, document, or software?
Also, since there are proprietary fonts, is it a problem if someone uses those fonts in free software? Suppose I write a program and release it under e.g. GPLv3, would that imply I can't use proprietary fonts in it? A more generalised question might be: Can proprietary fonts be used in free cultural works released under e.g. CC-By-SA? I suspect the answer is no, but is there a way to figure out license compatibility between fonts and everything else they're used in?
Sorry about the stream of emails! I'm just trying to do what I can to promote free software and free culture in my organisation. Thanks for your help!
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