- From: Sylvain Galineau <sylvaing@microsoft.com>
- Date: Wed, 12 May 2010 00:19:34 +0000
- To: John Hudson <tiro@tiro.com>, Dave Crossland <dave@lab6.com>
- CC: "public-webfonts-wg@w3.org" <public-webfonts-wg@w3.org>, www-font <www-font@w3.org>
> From: public-webfonts-wg-request@w3.org [mailto:public-webfonts-wg- > request@w3.org] On Behalf Of John Hudson > Why would they? Well, they might also not object because they might not even care. If UAs will load the result regardless, what is the consequence of not doing it or implementing it wrong ? Or what if the font maker gets their embedding bits wrong wrt their EULA, thus blocking the author by mistake...or allowing the font to be converted when it shouldn't ? ("But the tool was OK with it...") In practice, will web authors use a tool to generate a WOFF file, or will the font maker give them that WOFF file ? Does the author get a TTF with a license to make WOFFs out of it but only those can be used on the web, or does he get a no-web-use/no-conversion license for the TTF version and a separate WOFF with a web-use license ? Do we know that converting TTFs to WOFF through dedicated tools is going to be a common part of the workflow ? Do we know whether EULAs will allow or require the web designer to do this ? I'm not sure we know whether this problem needs solving yet. Well, I'm sure *I* don't know, at any rate :)
Received on Wednesday, 12 May 2010 00:20:14 UTC