You are here: silicon.com > Hardware > Desktops

Desktops

Firms face unlicensed font prosecution

The writing's on the wall for two companies under investigation

Tags: font, prosecution, fast, theft

By Andy McCue

Published: 11 September 2003 15:20 GMT

Businesses are unwittingly risking fines and criminal prosecution through the use of unlicensed fonts according to the Federation Against Software Theft (Fast).

Fast revealed that it is currently examining the potentially unlicensed use of fonts by two UK firms with a view to taking action against them.

The UK font industry claims 40 per cent of its revenues are lost through font theft and font designer Agfa Monotype has enlisted the support of Fast to raise awareness of the issue.

Fonts are usually acquired in operating systems such as Microsoft Windows and desktop applications, which actually restrict usage to any one specific workstation or desktop.

But Paul Brennan, general counsel at Fast, told silicon.com that firms may break the licence terms if, for example, it started to change or edit fonts for use in a marketing campaign. But most corporates aren't aware of this, he said.

"Most fonts are software and if you don't pay for it, then it is unlawful in the usual ways. It is fairly widespread," he said.

Julie Strawson, marketing director at Agfa Monotype, said in a statement that the campaign will help to ensure that designers receive just rewards for their intellectual property and that end-users are software compliant.

"The creative and design community is traditionally small, informal and therefore trust-based. But the nature of font distribution has been dramatically affected by the Internet, creating the need for tighter controls on licensing," she said.

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

Seb Janacek Magic Mouse - Apple's best ever? Minority Report: After years of disappointment, one Mac lover has hope

Bethan Jones Can I use a netbook as my everyday work machine? Why silicon.com's sub editor is ditching her laptop for a sprightly mini-laptop


  • Jobs
Service Platform Engineer

Experience of working in an ITIL compliant environment Cisco certification (CCNA or CCNP) Network Appliance NAS storage hardware and associated ...

Entry Level Unix Engineer

Experience of working within an ISO20000 compliant environment with emphasis on Change, Incident and Problem management is an advantage.ACS is an ...

Campaign Controller

The purpose of this role is to lead the Campaign Team, working with Operations and Marketing to define and deliver Sales channel strategies that ...

Agenda Setters 2009
Welcome to the ninth annual Agenda Setters poll – silicon.com's list of the top 50 most influential individuals in the technology and IT industries, from techies and CIOs to entrepreneurs and business leaders. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: