
David Starner wrote:
Marcello, however, is at least partially wrong; licenses of these fonts come with Windows, so there's no need to buy a license, and I suspect that they are embeddable; Microsoft paid a lot for their users to make wide use of these fonts, and went so far as to offer them to non-Windows users at one point.
True-type fonts have the embedding permissions set into the font file. As I write this I'm looking at the properties of Georgia v. 2.12, as it was distributed with my install of Windows XP. The embedding permissions say, "Installable embedding allowed; font may be embedded in documents and permanently installed on the remote system." This is the most liberal permission set that may be coded into a True-type font. -- RS