Hi, Chris, > > Releasing a font under GPL or OFL license simply ensures the font can > freely be used or modified by anyone and that no one can claim > proprietary or commercial rights. > > If somebody does want a similar font to sell under a commercial license > I'm perfectly willing to develop one for them for a fair price. >
Regarding "no one can claim proprietary or commercial rights," I believe that is actually not quite the case under U.S. copyright law, as I understand it. As the original font author, I believe that you yourself have the right to sell your own font under as many different licenses as you want, commercial as well as FLOSS. "Dual Licensing" appears to be becoming fairly common in the FLOSS software world. Commercial entities often ask for a commercial license from FLOSS vendors because their lawyers like that better, I guess. Maybe it is the liability thing -- a commercial entity does not want to be accused of "stealing" someone's software or font, open source or otherwise, so they want to negotiate payment for use. So you actually don't have to develop a separate font -- you can use the same one you have already developed and sell it if you have buyers. For something like Jomolhari, I'm sure there is a market. Best - Ed _______________________________________________ Openfontlibrary mailing list Openfontlibrary@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/openfontlibrary