Recently some other participants in the type-design industry asked me to endorse a letter to the U.S. Copyright Office about copyright registrations for digital fonts. The impetus was a set of concerns arising from ongoing rejections of font-copyright registrations and a recent opinion in a case called Laatz v. Zazzle pertaining to the infringement of font copyrights.
I didn’t add my name to the letter. For several reasons. First: I avoid doing free work for bigger companies. Second: I’ve never registered a copyright in my fonts, so the relevance seemed faint. Third: digital fonts (probably) aren’t protected by copyright, so the whole premise of the effort seemed fatally flawed.



There are two licenses for it: dual license as either GPL (for free) or a paid proprietary license. Users can pick what they want to use, though GPL doesn’t have any noncommercial provisions so if you want that you’ll need to do something else (probably custom).