I also don't know :(

I've read this in Larabie's site:

«Q: Can I use your fonts in my graphic design?

A: Yes. Yes. Yes. Use Larabie Fonts for logos, stationery, menus,
advertising, posters, signage, banners, movie credits, billboards,
anything! We love to see our fonts everywhere which is why we made
them free. We get email every day about with this same question. Yes,
it's true, you can really use Larabie Fonts typefaces for commercial
jobs.»

How this conflicts with a GPL license, I have no idea.

2008/3/18, Graham Evans <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> leandro ribeiro wrote:
>  > The font is called "Shifty chica"
>  >
>  > The author is this guy: http://www.larabiefonts.com/
>  >
>
> Here are the relevant license links:
>
>  For the Windows/Mac OSX ttf version of Shifty Chica a 'freeware' license
>  allowing commercial use:
>  http://www.myfonts.com/viewlicense?id=7
>
>  For the Opentype otf version of Shifty Chica require purchase of font
>  under a commercial license/EULA:
>  http://www.myfonts.com/viewlicense?id=555
>
>  I don't know enough about licenses and fonts to know how GPL issues
>  would interact with those licenses.  To me it sounds like we would need
>  an agreement from Ray Larabie to release under GPL but perhaps someone
>  with more knowledge of this topic knows better.
>
>  btw I looked into this because I really like that logo and that font.
>
>
>  Graham
>
>
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