- From: John Hudson <tiro@tiro.com>
- Date: Tue, 18 May 2010 18:37:58 -0700
- To: Christopher Slye <cslye@adobe.com>
- CC: public-webfonts-wg@w3.org, www-font@w3.org
Christopher Slye wrote: > John, I understand what you're saying, but I am still unconvinced that any explanation is necessary. This explanation seems to me very necessary: None of the existing embedding bits constitute or imply permission to create or serve a WOFF file. Web authors should confirm that a font is licensed for such use. And the reason that this explanation is necessary is that the only other dedicated web font format to which we can point, EOT, explicitly did associate embedding bits with creating and serving web fonts, thereby creating a perception that the embedding bits constituted or implied such permission. As I said earlier, I figured the browser makers would appreciate having the additional clarification that they're doing the right thing by ignoring embedding bits when downloading and unpacking WOFF files. If they don't appreciate that, okay we can drop it. And as for the whole tool conformance question and conflicting interpretations of embedding bit one, I'm more than happy for those to be dropped. But that one explanation, I do think is necessary because of the unfortunate precedence of EOT and its conflating of document embedding and web font linking. JH
Received on Wednesday, 19 May 2010 01:38:37 UTC