I suspect that their fonts are based on the visual designs, but not raw data of the URW fonts, otherwise GUST would be bound by the GPL, and could not change the license... As you know, font "looks" cannot be copyrighted in the U.S. (not sure about Europe though). So, the main question is: can Fedora use their work? Surely, it would be interesting to know if their relicensing business is kosher, but that's secondary. On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 5:55 PM, Nicolas Mailhot <nicolas.mailhot@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Le Jeu 24 juillet 2008 16:37, Tom \"spot\" Callaway a écrit : >> >> On Thu, 2008-07-24 at 16:33 +0200, Nicolas Mailhot wrote: >>> I wonder what fedora-legal has to say on the subject >> >> On what subject exactly? I'm missing all of the context here. > > Is it OK if for the gust project to relicense GPL fonts under the GUST > (LPPL) license ? > > We need an OpenType conversion of the ghostscript fonts so we can > forget about Type1. Those Polish TEX guys did one that looks good, but > publish the result under another (acceptable for us) license. > > You see this concern on page 8 of > http://www.gust.org.pl/projects/e-foundry/tex-gyre/afp05.pdf > > -- > Nicolas Mailhot > > _______________________________________________ Fedora-fonts-list mailing list Fedora-fonts-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-fonts-list