"Some font vendors say and publish on their website that their fonts are 
Unicode fonts."

All they mean by that that the character encoding assumed by their font is the 
character encoding defined in the Unicode Standard.

Neither the Unicode Standard nor the Unicode Consortium has any relationship 
whatsoever to the provenance of glyphs in fonts distributed by any party except 
in case of fonts distributed directly by the Unicode Consortium - and the only 
font distributed by the Unicode Consortium is the Last Resort Font, which was 
developed by Apple.

If you have concerns about someone stealing font IP, you should take that up 
directly with those parties. This mail list is not an appropriate forum for 
such issues, and the Unicode Consortium cannot form any position on the merits 
of such claims.



Peter


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf 
Of V. M. Kumaraswamy
Sent: Tuesday, June 01, 2010 7:58 AM
To: Doug Ewell
Cc: Unicode Mailing List
Subject: Re: IS UNICODE a STANDRAD ?

Some font vendors say and publish on their website that their fonts are Unicode 
fonts.

Some of these fonts are developed by stealing GLYPHS of some similar fonts 
whcih were available on the website. [that is: IPR stolen fonts]
On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 7:11 AM, Doug Ewell 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
V. M. Kumaraswamy wrote:
The Unicode Consortium is the publisher of The Unicode Standard as well as 
several other technical standards.

So Unicode Consortium publishes standards for fonts ?
The Unicode Standrad is for fonts that are used in different countries ?

No, Asmus did not say that the Unicode Standard is a font standard.  It is not. 
 It is a character standard, which is a different thing because the identity of 
a character is not the same as the images of that character as displayed in any 
given font.

The Unicode Consortium publishes charts showing representative examples of what 
each character looks like, for purposes of identifying the characters.  The 
exact images are not normative, nor are the fonts used to generate the charts.

The Unicode Standard especially does not specify anything about "fonts that are 
used in different countries."  Font vendors, or countries if they are the ones 
who dictate what fonts may be used, may choose any fonts they like.

--
Doug Ewell  |  Thornton, Colorado, USA  |  
http://www.ewellic.org<http://www.ewellic.org/>
RFC 5645, 4645, UTN #14  |  ietf-languages @ http://is.gd/2kf0s 

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