Voluntary Legal Deposit of Fonts in the British Library
Posted: Mon Jul 09, 2007 6:22 am
The following web page is about Legal Deposit in the British Library.
http://www.bl.uk/about/policies/legaldeposit.html
There is, as I understand it, at present no legal requirement to send copies of pure electronic (that is, not hardcopy) publications, as although the law for that has been passed the rules have not yet been implemented. That situation may well change.
However, one may deposit a pure electronic item by sending it as an email attachment to the email address stated on the page.
I have found that the British Library will accept pdfs and TTFs that have been published on the web for voluntary legal deposit and will send an email receipt if specifically requested to do so at the time that the email with the attached files for voluntary deposit are sent to them. I am a resident of the United Kingdom: I am unsure as to whether a font published on a web server hosted outside the United Kingdom would be accepted.
There is, as I understand it, no presumption whatsoever in English Law that a publisher is a business or an organization or that money is charged for the publications. An individual can be a publisher.
William Overington
9 July 2007
http://www.bl.uk/about/policies/legaldeposit.html
There is, as I understand it, at present no legal requirement to send copies of pure electronic (that is, not hardcopy) publications, as although the law for that has been passed the rules have not yet been implemented. That situation may well change.
However, one may deposit a pure electronic item by sending it as an email attachment to the email address stated on the page.
I have found that the British Library will accept pdfs and TTFs that have been published on the web for voluntary legal deposit and will send an email receipt if specifically requested to do so at the time that the email with the attached files for voluntary deposit are sent to them. I am a resident of the United Kingdom: I am unsure as to whether a font published on a web server hosted outside the United Kingdom would be accepted.
There is, as I understand it, no presumption whatsoever in English Law that a publisher is a business or an organization or that money is charged for the publications. An individual can be a publisher.
William Overington
9 July 2007