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British Publisher Faces Big Fines Over Unlicensed Fonts
By Samuel John Klein On 28th June 2006 @ 22:06 In Typography, News | No Comments
Health and financial publisher Campden faces large penalty for having over 11,000 fonts out-of-rights
Frequently the digital font user and designer hears of the possible effects of using font files and programs they don’t actually have a license to. As highlighted by Microsoft Typography and reported by [1] IT/e-commerce news site out-law.com here, A British publshing firm specializing in the spheres of finance and medicine, Campden Publishing, has just found out the bill: GBP 80,000 (nearly USD 145,500).
The investigation was carried out by the British arm of the Business Software Alliance, a software-industry group concerned with limiting the losses caused by digital file piracy. Out-law.com reports that the BSA conducted a software audit of the company after a tip-off from a former employee, bringing in a specialist from Monotype to do same for its font files.
At first the company claimed only one out-of-license font but, after the audit, it was found that the company actually had 11,000 unauthorized fonts. The software audit itself has similarly-bad news, with 95% of the firm’s Adobe software and 75% of its Microsoft product was also unlicensed.
Current CEO John Petifor cited recent company travail as a defense, being quoted by Out-law.com:
Software asset management is the last thing on your mind when you arrive at a company that is struggling for cash. The business was in real financial trouble and this issue wasn’t even on the radar.
The company has come up to compliance, but the cost has affected their bottom line coming as it does, all at once, in a time when company fortunes are in a state of turmoil.
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[1] IT/e-commerce news site out-law.com here: http://www.out-law.com/page-7037
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