smallerize 2 hours ago

Ok but what is the Russian Orthodox font at the top of the article?

voidhorse 11 minutes ago

> Imagine each Substack owner can make their own font to highlight the essence of their writing.

No please, for the love of all that is good and holy, please no

purplecats 3 hours ago

why dont they show you it in use? seems like an obvious thing.

quinniuq 5 hours ago

The writing style of this was so chaotic. I loved it, in a loopy, end-of-day sort of way

flobosg 5 hours ago

> Worlds first Ai generated font

For a brief moment I thought the title was referring to Adobe Illustrator.

Springtime 4 hours ago

> I also found out that my friend's company got charged $2,000 per character. WTF.

Is there more context to this? I can't see anything preceding it that explains what it's referencing.

  • ebaad96 4 hours ago

    Just the fact that a lot of people pay a lot of money to make fonts.

  • yieldcrv 3 hours ago

    Design and branding agencies cost a lot

    They are good for a cohesive message

    But their utility has just plummeted

amelius 4 hours ago

A font without copyright is not a real font.

  • Legend2440 4 hours ago

    Typefaces cannot be copyrighted in the US, so that’s really irrelevant.

    • simonw 3 hours ago

      Huh, TIL: https://www.copyright.gov/circs/circ33.pdf

      > Copyright law does not protect typeface or mere variations of typographical ornamentation or lettering. A typeface is a set of letters, numbers, or other characters with repeating design elements that is intended to be used in composing text or other combinations of characters, including calligraphy. Generally, typeface, fonts, and lettering are building blocks of expression that are used to create works of authorship. The Office cannot register a claim to copyright in typeface or mere variations of typographic ornamentation or lettering, regardless of whether the typeface is commonly used or unique.

      Given the incredible amount of work that goes into designing a typeface I find that really surprising.

      Wikipedia has some good coverage on this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intellectual_property_protecti...

      Apparently you CAN protect the implementation of a typeface, e.g. the font file itself. Wikipedia says:

      > Typefaces and their letter forms are considered utilitarian objects whose public utility outweighs any private interest in protecting their creative elements under US law, but the computer program that is used to display a typeface, a font file[a] of computer instructions in a domain-specific programming language may be protectable by copyright. In 1992, the US Copyright Office determined that digital outline fonts had elements that could be protected as software[13] if the source code of the font file "contains a sufficient amount of original authorship".

      • abtinf 2 hours ago

        Likewise I think it is extremely dubious that models can be copyrighted at all, for the exact same reason you can't copyright a phonebook or database. The entire regime of claiming to release models under various licenses is bullshit, because you can't copyright rote transformations of things either.

        • Legend2440 28 minutes ago

          This is definitely going to be argued over in court at some point, along with many other questions about AI and copyright.

          Speaking of which, why is it taking so long to get a supreme court decision on whether or not training counts as copyright infringement? The only court cases that have been resolved so far have settled on unrelated grounds without touching the core issue.

  • King-Aaron 3 hours ago

    This is a very strange perspective to take.

nkrisc an hour ago

Pretty interesting that this much is possible. Too bad the fonts are terrible.

yieldcrv 2 hours ago

I had tried vector based work a couple years ago and generative AI models were very limited at keeping up

I could see them being better now, havent revisited