On Mon, 03 Apr 2006, Frank Küster wrote: > The text of the document itself is free, and we can always generate a > PDF file from it which uses free fonts and ship that one. But we can't > ship the "binary form", the original PDF with non-free fonts included.
Well, this is the decision, and this is what I am questioning. > No, we only take away the possibility to read the document in a nice > way, as you pointed out yourself. And we clearly document that a forth > thing is missing, namely the usual > > - the user can extract arbitrary parts of the compiled document > and reuse them Ok, this he also can do with the document as soon as commercial fonts are embedded. Otherwise it would be illegal for the author to use the commercial font in this way. If you buy a font you have to accept that you include the fonts only as subsetted etc etc (you know). So this can happen always, and is in fact allowed. That is the reason why authors are not allowed to include the full font into the pdf document from the contract they have with the font company. (Leave alone border cases of encrypted/copy protected pdf documents, we are discussion here normal plain stupid simple pdf docs). So I don't see a problem here. What is still left is that we take away one freedom from a user. And give nothing instead. This doesn't serve right. > http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.debian.devel.legal/25166 Thanks, will read it. Best wishes Norbert ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dr. Norbert Preining <preining AT logic DOT at> Università di Siena gpg DSA: 0x09C5B094 fp: 14DF 2E6C 0307 BE6D AD76 A9C0 D2BF 4AA3 09C5 B094 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- PANT-Y-WACCO (adj.) The final state of mind of retired colonel before they come to take him away. --- Douglas Adams, The Meaning of Liff -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]