(3) EULAs vary tremendously not only from vendor to vendor, but often between one font and another offered by the same vendor. The EULA fully overrides any internal access privilege protections within TrueType or OpenType fonts. Legally, you are bound to the EULA (End User License Agreement) in effect at the time you licensed the font. (2) There is no simple response as to what you can do with the font and any content using or referencing the font. (1) If is highly unlikely that you “purchased” a font itself, but rather a license for use of the font. ![]() ![]() A few comments based on the original question and responses:
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