RE: Fonts on Web Pages

From: Philippe Verdy (verdy_p@wanadoo.fr)
Date: Tue Dec 02 2003 - 08:12:12 EST

  • Next message: Arcane Jill: "RE: Fonts on Web Pages"

    Arcane Jill writes:

    > Anyone know the current status on embedded fonts in web pages?

    > I basically have two questions.
    > (1) Assume the existence of a font to which I legally own the
    > copyright. For example, let's say I invented it. Now, I design
    > a web page which uses this font. Now, it's easy (but terribly
    > inconvenient) to say on the web page "Please download and
    > install this font in order to view this web page correctly",
    > but the truth is I know damn well that no-one will ever do
    > that. So, short of using small image files, what's the current
    > state-of-the-art technical solution to this.
    > Question (2) is the same as question (1), except that I don't
    > own the copyright. Suppose, for example I want to use this font
    > called Garamond. It's on my machine. (I don't know how it got
    > there - I think it came pre-installed with the OS). But of
    > course, I can't guarantee that it will be installed on someone
    > else's machine. And since I don't own the copyright, and don't
    > have explicit permission to distribute it, I don't think I'm
    > even allowed to say "Please download and install this font in
    > order to view this web page correctly". How do we solve this one?

    Both of your questions are being solved using more innovative
    embeddable fonts (like the .eot format which allows distributing
    encrypted glyphs used in a document, without distributing the
    font, and without allowing to reverse engineer the glyph datas
    to steal its design).

    There are several font distribution formats studied to allow
    embedding fonts without violating copyright: the author must
    just sign its glyph data which will become usable only in the
    documents he produces, provided that the author has a legal
    license to use that font.

    A solution already exists in PDF documents, which can embed
    preprocessed fonts that are quite difficult or imposible to
    reverse engineer completely (for example, composition tables,
    glyph positioning rules, kerning tables, and so on, are
    removed from the embedded "fonts" which just contain glyphs
    simply prepositioned in the PDF document pages).

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