Get Nebula using my link for 40% off an annual subscription: https://go.nebula.tv/linusboman
Nebula Sans documentary: https://nebula.tv/videos/nebula-sans or https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwMuLQPIThQ
Bonus commentary video: https://nebula.tv/videos/linusboman-commentary-font-piracy-video-and-nebula-sans
The infamous anti-DVD-piracy PSA turns out to have used a "pirated" font. That's deliciously ironic, but is it the most ironic case of font piracy of all time? Let's unpack a few cases from the long shared history of type design and piracy and find out.
Thanks to @JacobGeller and @MedlifeCrisis for lending their voices!
Sources and Links:
https://www.notion.so/timesnewboman/A-Secret-History-of-Font-Piracy-Sources-Links-1e8367f8714c804c8cfae76129684bd6
After the video was published, type designer Nick Sherman added further nuance and recommended readings on Mastodon – https://typo.social/@nicksherman/114556836336256389
Also worth reading - a great thread getting into the finer details of fonts and copyright by Rutherford Craze: https://typo.social/@mass_driver/114631298390552373
00:00 You wouldn't steal an iconic grunge font
01:00 The original font: FF Confidential
02:14 The pirate font: XBand Rough
02:56 Can a font even be copyrighted? It's complicated.
05:10 Grand Theft Typo, a.k.a. the Bitstream Heist
08:58 CD-ROM: The original slop era
11:24 Pirates of Lead (but in Latin for extra pretentiousness)
13:06 Type Crimes... History Rhymes
18:49 Commerce and design can never be separated