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Intellectual property protection of typefaces

Typefaces, fonts, and their glyphs raise intellectual property considerations in copyright, trademark, design patent, and related laws. The copyright status of a typeface and of any font file that describes it digitally varies between jurisdictions. In the United States, the shapes of typefaces are not eligible for copyright but may be protected by design patent (although it is rarely applied for, the first US design patent that was ever awarded was for a typeface).[1] Typefaces can be protected in other countries, including the United Kingdom, Germany, and France, by industrial design protections that are similar to copyright or design patent in that they protect the abstract shapes. Additionally, in the US and some other countries, computer fonts, the digital instantiation of the shapes as vector outlines, may be protected by copyright on the computer code that produces them. The name of a typeface may also be protected as a trademark.

Copyright edit

Germany edit

In 1981, West Germany passed the Gesetz zum Wiener Abkommen vom 12. Juni 1973 über den Schutz typographischer Schriftzeichen und ihre internationale Hinterlegung ("Law on the 1973 Vienna Agreement for the Protection of Type Faces and their International Deposit", also simply known as Schriftzeichengesetz or "Type Faces Law"), according to which a typeface is initially protected under German copyright law for 10 years from first publication onwards. After the end of the initial ten-year period, the rights holder may pay a fee to prolong copyright status for one additional 15 years period. According to German law, every typeface thus ends up in the public domain after no more than 25 years from first publication onwards, when it is also free to be digitized into a computer font, which in itself holds a much higher copyright protection status by German law than analogue typefaces because it is legally classified as a computer program.

The name of a typeface can separately be registered as a trademark (Wortmarke) for a fee, which, like a digital font, also holds much higher copyright protection status than an analogue typeface itself. If a typeface's name is trademarked, no other typeface may bear the same name, including digital clones of the analogue typeface.

Ireland edit

Irish copyright law covers typefaces. Like the United Kingdom law (see below), the Republic of Ireland allows for using the typeface in the ordinary course of printing. The term of protection is 15 years from first publication.[2]

Israel edit

Courts in Israel have recognized copyright in Henri Friedlaender's Hadassah typeface for a term exceeding 48 years, forcing Masterfont's unauthorized digitization off the market.[3]

Japan edit

The copyright law of Japan has not held typefaces to be covered in Japan by copyright on the ground that they function primarily as a means of communicating information, rather than an appeal to aesthetic appreciation.[4]

Russia edit

The copyright law of Russia has a legal vacuum with Soviet intellectual legacy combined with absence of specific law regulation of the fonts. That created the opposite situation in which all typefaces have copyright, and payments can be collected by current law. According to the Russian Yur'yev legal bureau, at least 99 legal threats by Lebedev's design studio have been about the use of studio made typefaces in Russia without payment.[5]

South Korea edit

The Supreme Court of South Korea has ruled that typefaces are not protected by copyright because they function primarily as a means of communicating information.[6]

Switzerland edit

The copyright law of Switzerland has no specific law for the protection of typefaces. So far, the jurisdiction has been very reluctant in admitting legal protection of any sort to typefaces in Switzerland. However, the denied protection is not imperative since in theory, typefaces could be protected based on both copyright and design law.[7] Additionally, the name of a typeface can be protected by a trademark.

United Kingdom edit

In 1916, England recognized copyright in typefaces but protected only the design with all the letters in their particular order.[8] The current United Kingdom copyright statute, enacted in 1989, expressly refers to copyrights in typeface designs.[9] English law considers that fonts are subject to copyright, but that covers typefaces for only 25 years from first publication and does not cover their usage by typographers.[9]

United States edit

Typefaces cannot be protected by copyright in the United States The idea that typefaces cannot be copyrighted in the United States has been black letter law since the introduction of Code of Federal Regulations, Ch 37, Sec. 202.1(e) in 1992.[10] The legal precedent that typefaces are not eligible for protection under U.S. copyright law was established before that in 1978 in Eltra Corp. v. Ringer. However, fonts can be protected by design patent, and computer programs that implement typefaces may be protected by copyright.

Typefaces and their letter forms are considered utilitarian objects whose public utility outweighs any private interest in protecting their creative elements under US law, but the computer program that is used to display a typeface, a font file[a] of computer instructions in a domain-specific programming language may be protectable by copyright. In 1992, the US Copyright Office determined that digital outline fonts had elements that could be protected as software[13] if the source code of the font file "contains a sufficient amount of original authorship".[14] Since that time, the Office has accepted registration of copyright for digital vector fonts, such as PostScript Type 1, TrueType, and OpenType[15] format files. As computer programs are protected as literary works in the United States, a font file program can only be eligible for copyright protection in the US if the source code of the computer instructions within the file was written by a human; due to the prominence of modern user-friendly digital font editor programs, this method of creating a font file is now quite rare.

Historically, the unavailability of protection for typefaces reaches back to at least 1976. In 1988, the Copyright Office published a report titled Policy Decision on Copyrightability of Digitized Typefaces,[16] which explains: "The decision in Eltra Corp. v. Ringer clearly comports with the intention of the Congress. Whether typeface designs should be protected by copyright was considered and specifically rejected by Congress in passing the Copyright Act of 1976. The 1976 House Report states: A "typeface" can be defined as a set of letters, numbers, or other symbolic characters, whose forms are related by repeating design elements consistently applied in a notational system and are intended to be embodied in articles whose intrinsic utilitarian function is for use in composing text or other cognizable combinations of characters. The Committee does not regard the design of typeface, as thus defined, to be a copyrightable "pictorial, graphic, or sculptural work" within the meaning of this bill and the application of the dividing line in section 101 [H.R. Reg. No. 1476, 94th Cong., 2nd Sess 5 (1976)].

In addition to rejecting copyright protection for typeface designs, Congress deferred a decision on a more limited form of protection under proposed ornamental design legislation. Title II of the 1976 copyright revision bill as passed by the Senate could have protected typeface designs, but the House of Representatives had doubts about the limited form of protection. Consequently, only copyright revision passed. [H.R. Reg. No. 1476 at 50 and 55]. Design legislation has yet to be enacted, and Congress has chosen not to include typeface designs within the Copyright Act's definition of pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works."[17]

According to section 906.4 of the Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices, typography and calligraphy also cannot be copyrighted in themselves.[18]

Design patents edit

Typefaces may be protected by a design patent in many countries (either automatically, by registration, or by some combination thereof). A design patent is the strongest system of protection, but the most uncommon. It is the only US legal precedent that protects the actual design (the design of the individual shapes of the letters) of the font.[19] The Lucida font family was one group that was formerly protected by design patent.[19]

Another prominent example is the European Union,[20] where the automatic protection (without registration) expires after three years and can be extended (by registration) up to 25 years.[21]

In 1981, Germany passed a special extension (Schriftzeichengesetz) to the design patent law (Geschmacksmustergesetz) for protecting typeface designs. This also permits typefaces to be registered as designs.[citation needed]

The US allows design patents for fonts. In fact, the very first design patent awarded in the US (U.S. patent D1), in 1842, was for a font designed by George Bruce. Currently, US design patents are for 15 years from the date of grant (previously 14 years).

Trademarks edit

The names of particular fonts may be protected by a trademark. This is the weakest form of protection because only the font name itself is being protected. For example, the letters that make up the trademarked font Palatino can be copied but the name must be changed.[19]

URW++ was involved in a 1995 lawsuit with Monotype Corporation for cloning their fonts and naming them with a name starting with the same three letters. As typeface shapes themselves cannot be copyrighted in the United States, the lawsuit centered on trademark infringement. A US court decided that Monotype's trademarks were "fanciful" and did not have descriptive value of the actual products. However it also decided that URW was confusing the public deliberately because "the purloining of the first part of a well-known trademark and the appending of it to a worthless suffix is a method of trademark poaching long condemned by the courts." The court issued an injunction preventing URW from using their chosen names.[22]

Licensing edit

The basic standard for copyrighted digital font use is that a license is required for each individual font used on a computer, or in the case of businesses, one per entity.[19] Under the license fonts are typically licensed only for use on one computer. These End User License Agreements (EULAs) generally state that fonts may only be used on machines that have a valid license.[19] These fonts cannot be shared by multiple computers or given to others. These licenses can be obtained in three ways: directly from the font authors (e.g., Adobe), as part of a larger software package (e.g., Microsoft Office), or through purchasing or downloading the font from an authorized outlet.[19]

Such licenses typically only apply to the font file itself (which is a computer program), and not to the shape of the typeface, which may be subject to a design patent.

Open-source font licenses include the GNU General Public License with the Font Exception, the SIL Open Font License, and the Ubuntu Font License.

Lawsuits edit

From 1993 to 1995, Bitstream Inc. and four other type companies successfully sued SWFTE for copyright infringement.[19] SWFTE was using special computer programs to take other type founders' fonts, convert them, and give them new names.[19] The case focused on the fact that SWFTE had used Bitstream's software to create these new fonts.[19]

Adobe Systems, Inc. v. Southern Software, Inc. helped clear the distinction between intellectual property protection for a font and a typeface.[19] SSI had used the FontMonger program to copy and rename fonts from Adobe and others.[19] They assumed safety from prosecution because they had directly copied the points that define the shapes from Adobe's fonts, but they had made slight adjustments to all the points so that they were not technically identical.[19] Nevertheless, it was determined that the computer code had been copied.[19][23]

On 21 January 2016,[24] Font Brothers filed a lawsuit against Hasbro, claiming that Hasbro used the "Generation B" font for its My Little Pony product without permission. Font Brothers claimed that Hasbro had refused to comply with its licensing request. It is also claiming substantial damages, from loss of revenue for that misuse and requesting a jury trial to resolve this matter.[25]

Most recently, Berthold LLC sued Target Corporation for its alleged breach of a font license agreement. Berthold LLC v. Target Corp., No. 1:17-cv-07180 (N.D. Ill.). The lawsuit claimed that Target gave Calango, a design firm that Target had hired, copies of Berthold's font software without permission.[26] The case was dismissed with prejudice in 2018.[27]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ In computing parlance, a distinction is sometimes drawn between the font as the computer program and the typeface as the shapes the program produces. However, both terms are often used synonymously,[11] and the Copyright Office uses them equivalently to refer to typefaces.[12]

References edit

  1. ^ "Patent #: US0D0000001". United States Patent and Trademark Office. 9 November 1842. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
  2. ^ Copyright and Related Rights Act, 2000 (Ireland), §§ 84-85. Irishstatutebook.ie, Accessed January 31, 2013.
  3. ^ Misha Beletsky. "Hadassah Friedlaender". Typographica, 2016-05-09. Accessed 2019-09-21.
  4. ^ Yagi v. Kashiwa Shobo K.K., II-1 Chosakuken Hanreishu 8 (9 Mar. 1979, Tokyo District Court) (the Typeface Design Case), cited in Karjala, Dennis S.; Sugiyama, Keiji (Autumn 1988). "Fundamental Concepts in Japanese and American Copyright Law". The American Journal of Comparative Law. 36 (4): 613, 625–26. doi:10.2307/840277. JSTOR 840277.
  5. ^ "Юридическое бюро Юрьева - Шрифт как объект авторского права". Juryev.ru. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  6. ^ The Supreme Court of South Korea 94누5632
  7. ^ "Valentin Blank — Schriftschutz". Vblank.ch. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  8. ^ "Stephenson, Blake and Co. v. Grant, Legros & Co., 115 L.T.R. 666, 61 Sol. J. 55 (1916), reprinted in E.J. MacGillivray, Copyright Cases 1911-1916 326-329 (1969), aff'd 116 L.T.R. 268 (1917), noted in 13 Eng. and Empire Digest 68, 68-69. The court recognized that the typeface design was subject to copyright under the then-current Copyright Act of 1911, an Act to Amend and Consolidate the Law Relating to Copyright, 1911, 1 & 2 Geo. 5, ch. 46 (Eng.). However, the plaintiff's victory was hollow. The court held that the copyright protected only the design in its entirety, with all the letters in their particular order. The defendant's embodiment of them into a font of his own, as opposed to a reproduction of the design with the letters in the same order, was held not to infringe. MacGillivray, supra at 327-28". Terrence J. Carroll, Protection For Typeface Designs: A Copyright Proposal, 10 Santa Clara Computer & High Tech. L.J. 139, 169, n.181.
  9. ^ a b Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988 (c. 48), § 54 (England), Legislation.gov.uk
  10. ^ 57 Fed.Reg. 6202, see https://www.federalregister.gov/citation/57-FR-6202 and https://archives.federalregister.gov/issue_slice/1992/2/21/6201-6203.pdf#page=2. "Section 202.1(e) is added to read as follows: * * * * * (e) Typeface as typeface."
  11. ^ "font". Wiktionary. 21 July 2022.
  12. ^ United States Copyright Office. "Circular 33: Works Not Protected by Copyright" (PDF). copyright.gov.
  13. ^ "Registrability of Computer Programs that Generate Typefaces", 57 Fed. Reg. 6201 (Feb. 21, 1992), reproduced in U.S. Copyright Office announcement ML-443 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Compendium of U.S. Copyright Office Practices, Third Edition, §723, "Computer Programs That Generate Typeface, Typefont, or Barcodes", pg 53, https://copyright.gov/comp3/chap700/ch700-literary-works.pdf#page=53
  15. ^ "WebVoyage".
  16. ^ (PDF). Copyright.gov. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  17. ^ The Copyright Office (29 September 1988). "Policy Decision on Copyrightability of Digitized Typefaces" (PDF). Federal Register. Office of the Federal Register. 53 (189): 38110–38113. ISSN 0097-6326. OCLC 436630761.
  18. ^ (PDF). United States Copyright Office. 22 December 2014. p. 13. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 December 2014. Retrieved 22 December 2014. As a general rule, typeface, typefont, lettering, calligraphy, and typographic ornamentation are not registrable.
  19. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gaultney, Victor (31 October 2003). "Font Licensing and Protection Details". Sil International and UNESCO. Retrieved 23 October 2010.
  20. ^ [1] 2011-04-06 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ [2] 2011-04-06 at the Wayback Machine
  22. ^ Lawrence D. Graham (1999). Legal Battles that Shaped the Computer Industry. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 47–48. ISBN 978-1-56720-178-9.
  23. ^ Adobe Systems, Inc. v. Southern Software, Inc. 2010-05-22 at the Wayback Machine, No. C 95-20710 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1941 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 2, 1998).
  24. ^ "Font Brothers, Inc., v. Hasbro, Inc" (PDF). Torrentfreak.com. Retrieved 19 January 2017.
  25. ^ ""My Little Pony" Sued For Using a Pirated Font - TorrentFreak". TorrentFreak.
  26. ^ https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.ilnd.344822/gov.uscourts.ilnd.344822.45.0.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  27. ^ https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.ilnd.344822/gov.uscourts.ilnd.344822.59.0.pdf[bare URL PDF]

intellectual, property, protection, typefaces, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, boo. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Intellectual property protection of typefaces news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Typefaces fonts and their glyphs raise intellectual property considerations in copyright trademark design patent and related laws The copyright status of a typeface and of any font file that describes it digitally varies between jurisdictions In the United States the shapes of typefaces are not eligible for copyright but may be protected by design patent although it is rarely applied for the first US design patent that was ever awarded was for a typeface 1 Typefaces can be protected in other countries including the United Kingdom Germany and France by industrial design protections that are similar to copyright or design patent in that they protect the abstract shapes Additionally in the US and some other countries computer fonts the digital instantiation of the shapes as vector outlines may be protected by copyright on the computer code that produces them The name of a typeface may also be protected as a trademark Contents 1 Copyright 1 1 Germany 1 2 Ireland 1 3 Israel 1 4 Japan 1 5 Russia 1 6 South Korea 1 7 Switzerland 1 8 United Kingdom 1 9 United States 2 Design patents 3 Trademarks 4 Licensing 5 Lawsuits 6 See also 7 Notes 8 ReferencesCopyright editGermany edit In 1981 West Germany passed the Gesetz zum Wiener Abkommen vom 12 Juni 1973 uber den Schutz typographischer Schriftzeichen und ihre internationale Hinterlegung Law on the 1973 Vienna Agreement for the Protection of Type Faces and their International Deposit also simply known as Schriftzeichengesetz or Type Faces Law according to which a typeface is initially protected under German copyright law for 10 years from first publication onwards After the end of the initial ten year period the rights holder may pay a fee to prolong copyright status for one additional 15 years period According to German law every typeface thus ends up in the public domain after no more than 25 years from first publication onwards when it is also free to be digitized into a computer font which in itself holds a much higher copyright protection status by German law than analogue typefaces because it is legally classified as a computer program The name of a typeface can separately be registered as a trademark Wortmarke for a fee which like a digital font also holds much higher copyright protection status than an analogue typeface itself If a typeface s name is trademarked no other typeface may bear the same name including digital clones of the analogue typeface Ireland edit Irish copyright law covers typefaces Like the United Kingdom law see below the Republic of Ireland allows for using the typeface in the ordinary course of printing The term of protection is 15 years from first publication 2 Israel edit Courts in Israel have recognized copyright in Henri Friedlaender s Hadassah typeface for a term exceeding 48 years forcing Masterfont s unauthorized digitization off the market 3 Japan edit The copyright law of Japan has not held typefaces to be covered in Japan by copyright on the ground that they function primarily as a means of communicating information rather than an appeal to aesthetic appreciation 4 Russia edit The copyright law of Russia has a legal vacuum with Soviet intellectual legacy combined with absence of specific law regulation of the fonts That created the opposite situation in which all typefaces have copyright and payments can be collected by current law According to the Russian Yur yev legal bureau at least 99 legal threats by Lebedev s design studio have been about the use of studio made typefaces in Russia without payment 5 South Korea edit The Supreme Court of South Korea has ruled that typefaces are not protected by copyright because they function primarily as a means of communicating information 6 Switzerland edit The copyright law of Switzerland has no specific law for the protection of typefaces So far the jurisdiction has been very reluctant in admitting legal protection of any sort to typefaces in Switzerland However the denied protection is not imperative since in theory typefaces could be protected based on both copyright and design law 7 Additionally the name of a typeface can be protected by a trademark United Kingdom edit In 1916 England recognized copyright in typefaces but protected only the design with all the letters in their particular order 8 The current United Kingdom copyright statute enacted in 1989 expressly refers to copyrights in typeface designs 9 English law considers that fonts are subject to copyright but that covers typefaces for only 25 years from first publication and does not cover their usage by typographers 9 United States edit Typefaces cannot be protected by copyright in the United States The idea that typefaces cannot be copyrighted in the United States has been black letter law since the introduction of Code of Federal Regulations Ch 37 Sec 202 1 e in 1992 10 The legal precedent that typefaces are not eligible for protection under U S copyright law was established before that in 1978 in Eltra Corp v Ringer However fonts can be protected by design patent and computer programs that implement typefaces may be protected by copyright Typefaces and their letter forms are considered utilitarian objects whose public utility outweighs any private interest in protecting their creative elements under US law but the computer program that is used to display a typeface a font file a of computer instructions in a domain specific programming language may be protectable by copyright In 1992 the US Copyright Office determined that digital outline fonts had elements that could be protected as software 13 if the source code of the font file contains a sufficient amount of original authorship 14 Since that time the Office has accepted registration of copyright for digital vector fonts such as PostScript Type 1 TrueType and OpenType 15 format files As computer programs are protected as literary works in the United States a font file program can only be eligible for copyright protection in the US if the source code of the computer instructions within the file was written by a human due to the prominence of modern user friendly digital font editor programs this method of creating a font file is now quite rare Historically the unavailability of protection for typefaces reaches back to at least 1976 In 1988 the Copyright Office published a report titled Policy Decision on Copyrightability of Digitized Typefaces 16 which explains The decision in Eltra Corp v Ringer clearly comports with the intention of the Congress Whether typeface designs should be protected by copyright was considered and specifically rejected by Congress in passing the Copyright Act of 1976 The 1976 House Report states A typeface can be defined as a set of letters numbers or other symbolic characters whose forms are related by repeating design elements consistently applied in a notational system and are intended to be embodied in articles whose intrinsic utilitarian function is for use in composing text or other cognizable combinations of characters The Committee does not regard the design of typeface as thus defined to be a copyrightable pictorial graphic or sculptural work within the meaning of this bill and the application of the dividing line in section 101 H R Reg No 1476 94th Cong 2nd Sess 5 1976 In addition to rejecting copyright protection for typeface designs Congress deferred a decision on a more limited form of protection under proposed ornamental design legislation Title II of the 1976 copyright revision bill as passed by the Senate could have protected typeface designs but the House of Representatives had doubts about the limited form of protection Consequently only copyright revision passed H R Reg No 1476 at 50 and 55 Design legislation has yet to be enacted and Congress has chosen not to include typeface designs within the Copyright Act s definition of pictorial graphic or sculptural works 17 According to section 906 4 of the Compendium of U S Copyright Office Practices typography and calligraphy also cannot be copyrighted in themselves 18 Design patents editTypefaces may be protected by a design patent in many countries either automatically by registration or by some combination thereof A design patent is the strongest system of protection but the most uncommon It is the only US legal precedent that protects the actual design the design of the individual shapes of the letters of the font 19 The Lucida font family was one group that was formerly protected by design patent 19 Another prominent example is the European Union 20 where the automatic protection without registration expires after three years and can be extended by registration up to 25 years 21 In 1981 Germany passed a special extension Schriftzeichengesetz to the design patent law Geschmacksmustergesetz for protecting typeface designs This also permits typefaces to be registered as designs citation needed The US allows design patents for fonts In fact the very first design patent awarded in the US U S patent D1 in 1842 was for a font designed by George Bruce Currently US design patents are for 15 years from the date of grant previously 14 years Trademarks editThe names of particular fonts may be protected by a trademark This is the weakest form of protection because only the font name itself is being protected For example the letters that make up the trademarked font Palatino can be copied but the name must be changed 19 URW was involved in a 1995 lawsuit with Monotype Corporation for cloning their fonts and naming them with a name starting with the same three letters As typeface shapes themselves cannot be copyrighted in the United States the lawsuit centered on trademark infringement A US court decided that Monotype s trademarks were fanciful and did not have descriptive value of the actual products However it also decided that URW was confusing the public deliberately because the purloining of the first part of a well known trademark and the appending of it to a worthless suffix is a method of trademark poaching long condemned by the courts The court issued an injunction preventing URW from using their chosen names 22 Licensing editThe basic standard for copyrighted digital font use is that a license is required for each individual font used on a computer or in the case of businesses one per entity 19 Under the license fonts are typically licensed only for use on one computer These End User License Agreements EULAs generally state that fonts may only be used on machines that have a valid license 19 These fonts cannot be shared by multiple computers or given to others These licenses can be obtained in three ways directly from the font authors e g Adobe as part of a larger software package e g Microsoft Office or through purchasing or downloading the font from an authorized outlet 19 Such licenses typically only apply to the font file itself which is a computer program and not to the shape of the typeface which may be subject to a design patent Open source font licenses include the GNU General Public License with the Font Exception the SIL Open Font License and the Ubuntu Font License Lawsuits editFrom 1993 to 1995 Bitstream Inc and four other type companies successfully sued SWFTE for copyright infringement 19 SWFTE was using special computer programs to take other type founders fonts convert them and give them new names 19 The case focused on the fact that SWFTE had used Bitstream s software to create these new fonts 19 Adobe Systems Inc v Southern Software Inc helped clear the distinction between intellectual property protection for a font and a typeface 19 SSI had used the FontMonger program to copy and rename fonts from Adobe and others 19 They assumed safety from prosecution because they had directly copied the points that define the shapes from Adobe s fonts but they had made slight adjustments to all the points so that they were not technically identical 19 Nevertheless it was determined that the computer code had been copied 19 23 On 21 January 2016 24 Font Brothers filed a lawsuit against Hasbro claiming that Hasbro used the Generation B font for its My Little Pony product without permission Font Brothers claimed that Hasbro had refused to comply with its licensing request It is also claiming substantial damages from loss of revenue for that misuse and requesting a jury trial to resolve this matter 25 Most recently Berthold LLC sued Target Corporation for its alleged breach of a font license agreement Berthold LLC v Target Corp No 1 17 cv 07180 N D Ill The lawsuit claimed that Target gave Calango a design firm that Target had hired copies of Berthold s font software without permission 26 The case was dismissed with prejudice in 2018 27 See also editLegal aspects of computing Intellectual propertyNotes edit In computing parlance a distinction is sometimes drawn between the font as the computer program and the typeface as the shapes the program produces However both terms are often used synonymously 11 and the Copyright Office uses them equivalently to refer to typefaces 12 References edit Patent US0D0000001 United States Patent and Trademark Office 9 November 1842 Retrieved 23 November 2014 Copyright and Related Rights Act 2000 Ireland 84 85 Irishstatutebook ie Accessed January 31 2013 Misha Beletsky Hadassah Friedlaender Typographica 2016 05 09 Accessed 2019 09 21 Yagi v Kashiwa Shobo K K II 1 Chosakuken Hanreishu 8 9 Mar 1979 Tokyo District Court the Typeface Design Case cited in Karjala Dennis S Sugiyama Keiji Autumn 1988 Fundamental Concepts in Japanese and American Copyright Law The American Journal of Comparative Law 36 4 613 625 26 doi 10 2307 840277 JSTOR 840277 Yuridicheskoe byuro Yureva Shrift kak obekt avtorskogo prava Juryev ru Retrieved 19 January 2017 The Supreme Court of South Korea 94누5632 Valentin Blank Schriftschutz Vblank ch Retrieved 19 January 2017 Stephenson Blake and Co v Grant Legros amp Co 115 L T R 666 61 Sol J 55 1916 reprinted in E J MacGillivray Copyright Cases 1911 1916 326 329 1969 aff d 116 L T R 268 1917 noted in 13 Eng and Empire Digest 68 68 69 The court recognized that the typeface design was subject to copyright under the then current Copyright Act of 1911 an Act to Amend and Consolidate the Law Relating to Copyright 1911 1 amp 2 Geo 5 ch 46 Eng However the plaintiff s victory was hollow The court held that the copyright protected only the design in its entirety with all the letters in their particular order The defendant s embodiment of them into a font of his own as opposed to a reproduction of the design with the letters in the same order was held not to infringe MacGillivray supra at 327 28 Terrence J Carroll Protection For Typeface Designs A Copyright Proposal 10 Santa Clara Computer amp High Tech L J 139 169 n 181 a b Copyright Designs and Patents Act 1988 c 48 54 England Legislation gov uk 57 Fed Reg 6202 see https www federalregister gov citation 57 FR 6202 and https archives federalregister gov issue slice 1992 2 21 6201 6203 pdf page 2 Section 202 1 e is added to read as follows e Typeface as typeface font Wiktionary 21 July 2022 United States Copyright Office Circular 33 Works Not Protected by Copyright PDF copyright gov Registrability of Computer Programs that Generate Typefaces 57 Fed Reg 6201 Feb 21 1992 reproduced in U S Copyright Office announcement ML 443 Archived 7 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine Compendium of U S Copyright Office Practices Third Edition 723 Computer Programs That Generate Typeface Typefont or Barcodes pg 53 https copyright gov comp3 chap700 ch700 literary works pdf page 53 WebVoyage Notice of Policy Decision on Copyrightability of Digitized Typefaces PDF Copyright gov Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 19 January 2017 The Copyright Office 29 September 1988 Policy Decision on Copyrightability of Digitized Typefaces PDF Federal Register Office of the Federal Register 53 189 38110 38113 ISSN 0097 6326 OCLC 436630761 Compendium of U S Copyright Office Practices 906 4 Typeface Typefont Lettering Calligraphy and Typographic Ornamentation PDF United States Copyright Office 22 December 2014 p 13 Archived from the original PDF on 23 December 2014 Retrieved 22 December 2014 As a general rule typeface typefont lettering calligraphy and typographic ornamentation are not registrable a b c d e f g h i j k l m Gaultney Victor 31 October 2003 Font Licensing and Protection Details Sil International and UNESCO Retrieved 23 October 2010 1 Archived 2011 04 06 at the Wayback Machine 2 Archived 2011 04 06 at the Wayback Machine Lawrence D Graham 1999 Legal Battles that Shaped the Computer Industry Greenwood Publishing Group pp 47 48 ISBN 978 1 56720 178 9 Adobe Systems Inc v Southern Software Inc Archived 2010 05 22 at the Wayback Machine No C 95 20710 1998 U S Dist LEXIS 1941 N D Cal Feb 2 1998 Font Brothers Inc v Hasbro Inc PDF Torrentfreak com Retrieved 19 January 2017 My Little Pony Sued For Using a Pirated Font TorrentFreak TorrentFreak https storage courtlistener com recap gov uscourts ilnd 344822 gov uscourts ilnd 344822 45 0 pdf bare URL PDF https storage courtlistener com recap gov uscourts ilnd 344822 gov uscourts ilnd 344822 59 0 pdf bare URL PDF Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Intellectual property protection of typefaces amp oldid 1207338116, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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