You can snag the fonts folder directly from a windows install under C:\Windows\Fonts
You can also download them from Soulseek assuming I’m online (which I am not currently) and probably other locations (but be safe about it of course).
I don’t have a problem with either of these on a personal level, and you might be fine copying the folder as long as you own the copy of Windows. Professionally, Microsoft might actually have a case that you are using their fonts outside of their agreement.
Also, unless you can get a proper license from Soulseek (or wherever) that limits your liability, you are probably in the same boat.
Just make sure that you don’t mix business with a personal machine if you do this. I am not a lawyer, but I am in IT. Fonts are a source of aggressive litigation lately, so I’m only suggesting you be careful or find a proper alternative. I would treat any gray area professionally as a possible breach of terms. I think the real take-away is that unless you really need it you can do without it.
Nobody can but the companies that make it. Mostly due to kernel level anticheat (which you shouldn’t install on windows either tbh). Some games like Destiny run fine but they just ban your acct for playing on linux, it isn’t linux that is the problem, it’s Bungie (etc).
I agree completely. Something something played us for fools.
Sure probably (though I wonder how you’d get caught) but if it’s “for work” then imo it should be a work laptop and then likely has windows already and they won’t (often) let you install linux anyway.
So professionally, if you include a document searchable online and maybe it’s clear that you both made the document and use no Windows computers but somehow still included these fonts then there might be a case, but I think it would be difficult to pursue and would probably not be considered as the original intent was to put these fonts out in the wild.
Again, IDK. I’m not a lawyer and don’t pay for one. My suggestion is to avoid the grey areas unless you are prepared to fight.
I don’t have a problem with either of these on a personal level, and you might be fine copying the folder as long as you own the copy of Windows. Professionally, Microsoft might actually have a case that you are using their fonts outside of their agreement.
Also, unless you can get a proper license from Soulseek (or wherever) that limits your liability, you are probably in the same boat.
Just make sure that you don’t mix business with a personal machine if you do this. I am not a lawyer, but I am in IT. Fonts are a source of aggressive litigation lately, so I’m only suggesting you be careful or find a proper alternative. I would treat any gray area professionally as a possible breach of terms. I think the real take-away is that unless you really need it you can do without it.
I agree completely. Something something played us for fools.
Sure probably (though I wonder how you’d get caught) but if it’s “for work” then imo it should be a work laptop and then likely has windows already and they won’t (often) let you install linux anyway.
So professionally, if you include a document searchable online and maybe it’s clear that you both made the document and use no Windows computers but somehow still included these fonts then there might be a case, but I think it would be difficult to pursue and would probably not be considered as the original intent was to put these fonts out in the wild.
Again, IDK. I’m not a lawyer and don’t pay for one. My suggestion is to avoid the grey areas unless you are prepared to fight.