On Oct 23, 2014, at 11:31 AM, Eric Muller wrote:

> 
>> How about even having just the glyphs in the Unicode.org charts being in the 
>> public domain?
> 
> Very easy to achieve:
> 
> 1. Ask the owner of the font how much money he wants to part with his 
> property.
> 2. Write a check for the corresponding amount.
> 3. You are now the owner, you can put the font in the public domain.
> 

You are right, of course, but I was thinking of uses other than to make fonts.

It seems a bit odd to me sometimes that there is no guaranteed public domain 
example for characters.   If someone wants to publish and sell a book in which 
they say something like "This is how Unicode suggests that character U+XXXX is 
supposed to look:" and then they copy the glyph from the Unicode chart,  as I 
understand it they are violating copyright unless they get permission from the 
author of the font that was used for the chart.  Or if they wanted to use one 
of the emoji characters from the charts on a public sign. 

Is that correct?


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