Recently some other participants in the type-design industry asked me to endorse a letter to the U.S. Copyright Office about copyright registrations for digital fonts. The impetus was a set of concerns arising from ongoing rejections of font-copyright registrations and a recent opinion in a case called Laatz v. Zazzle pertaining to the infringement of font copyrights.
I didn’t add my name to the letter. For several reasons. First: I avoid doing free work for bigger companies. Second: I’ve never registered a copyright in my fonts, so the relevance seemed faint. Third: digital fonts (probably) aren’t protected by copyright, so the whole premise of the effort seemed fatally flawed.



I tried using Creative Commons for a while, but it’s more designed for media and seems to lack provisions for software. But, IANAL and maybe it’d be fine to use CC0 or CC BY-NC-SA 4.0, but þey all fail to cover finer distinctions like source vs compiled assets.