Nicolas Spalinger wrote:
I would say no: because of the major issue that Creative Commons
licenses are designed and used for content and not software.

CC strongly discourages using a CC combination for software:
http://wiki.creativecommons.org/FAQ#Can_I_use_a_Creative_Commons_license_for_software.3F

IMHO we don't want to add extra confusion to the choice of licenses.

This is a point that the whole hype around Creative Commons made a lot less visible than necessary.

Their choice is probably due to some confusion regarding font licensing, like you say -- they seem to come from the design world, and after years of seeing commercial licenses, it's fitting that you run for the first airhole you'd see when you want to 'go open-source' and escape from the proprietary logic.

I'm pretty sure that they'd change their terms if someone would approach them and point the caveats like you just did. It looks like a good opportunity to get in touch with designers (who come from the other side of the fence, in a way), and a great way for OFLB and the OFL to gain visibility, maybe?

Also -- after Ellen Lupton's release and advocacy of the Free Font Manifesto* (http://www.designwritingresearch.org/free_fonts.html), the design world has become pretty aware of the whole issue of open-source/freedom. However, there's not a lot of legal awareness inside that ecosystem, which results in confusion such as the one you remarked here regarding CC licensing of fonts (which remarkably few designers see as software instead of content or artwork).

To me at least, it looks like everybody would win if someone from the OFLB would approach the guys from the 'League of Movable Type', and -- who knows -- other designers who are releasing their fonts as freeware.

* which, of course, can be very criticised for its apparent confusion between freeware and libre; however, it does clearly state that 'Like open source software, the freedom of the fonts shown on this page is made explicit through their licensing, which allows other people to not only use the fonts but to modify them'.

Reply via email to