![]() ![]() ![]() The key question is whether the fonts are changed at all by Calibre. This is the situation described in 1.15 below. I can’t tell exactly what Calibre does, but it seems it may be doing it this way. Unlike PDF, ebook packages mostly ‘embed’ fonts by copying the font into the package and referencing it in the ebook CSS. Hi - this forum is mainly for support of SIL fonts, not the SIL Open Font License, however I’ll try to help.įont embedding is discussed in the OFL-FAQ. I have been searching for an answer to this for months reading licenses, FAQ, asking people in publishing platforms and no one has a definite answer. So, let’s say the font is embedded: What if I just include links inside the first pages of the ebook about where I got the font from ( ) & info about the font license ( )? Would that be enough from a legal standpoint? And if not, how can I include the license txt file inside the epub file? According to the OFL: the license txt file should be included in the epub file but I don’t know how to do that (I don’t even know if it’s necessary to do that if the font is not embedded). I don’t know if I should embed the font as it may create issues w/ some publishers or so I’m told.Įither way, my question is about the license part. I’m using the font in Word, then create the epub w/ the Calibre software. ![]() I want to publish an epub using a google open font (Noto mono). ![]()
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