Goldman Sachs Created A Font, But You Are Forbidden By Its License To Critique Goldman Sachs Using It
from the comically-sans dept
Even if you find financial news incredibly boring, you will be familiar with investment firm Goldman Sachs. The famed investment bank has a list of purported controversies that rivals some small nations, which will become important in a bit. First, let’s focus on this bit of hot news: Goldman Sachs developed its own font!
Goldman Sachs has released its own eponymous font, Goldman Sans, a contemporary sans-serif that garnishes merciless formality with a charming typographic “wink” here and there.
If you want to see what the font looks like, you can see it here. It’s… certainly a font? To be honest, it looks clean and fine, but not especially unique. Unlike, say, the license it issues for the use of the font, which it is also giving away for free. Because, in addition to that license stating that Goldman Sachs can rescind the license at its whim — turning anything created using it into a potential retroactive legal liability — the license also states that you cannot use Goldman Sans to criticize Goldman Sachs, which is Goldman stupid.
(C)(2)(d) The User may not use the Licensed Font Software to disparage or suggest any affiliation with or endorsement by Goldman Sachs.
(E)(2) Further, Goldman Sachs may terminate this License, without notice to the User, for any reason or no reason at all and at any time, completely at Goldman Sachs’s sole discretion.
For a company that has so many controversies listed on its Wikipedia page, it sure is thin-skinned. And given that thin-skinnedness and the fact that the license allows the company to basically make any content created with it infringement at its whim… why in the absolute hell would anyone ever create anything with this font? Like, at all?
Other than the myriad of comments in the source article and elsewhere in which folks immediately started using the font to criticize Goldman Sachs, I mean.
Filed Under: fonts, goldman sans, license, streisand effect
Companies: goldman sachs
Comments on “Goldman Sachs Created A Font, But You Are Forbidden By Its License To Critique Goldman Sachs Using It”
Just get a 'We are super sleazy' billboard next time guys...
Because nothing says both ‘Never use this font’ and ‘There are tons of legitimate reasons to criticize us that we are desperately trying to hide’ quite like creating a font that can have it’s use revoked on a whim and that comes packaged with a gag-order in it’s license.
Advice for GS
Maybe Goldman Sachs should fire Lloyd Blankfein and hire Barbara Streisand; she knows what it’s like when unintended consequences happen.
As a typeface designer, Goldman Sachs font sucks. It’s corporate and boring. The M is atrocious. The J is offensive. The only elements that distinguish it from existing typefaces are the terrible ones.
Re: Re:
"It’s corporate and boring."
You expected exciting individuality from Goldman Sachs?
The M is atrocious
Perhaps some clueless corporation that’s never been mentioned here on Techdirt before will monster them about that letter.
Other font
Fuck Goldman Sachs. In Every Other Font.
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Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Wow, that’s terrible!
Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Obvious tr0ll is obvious. Try a LOT harder, like Charles.
Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Ah yes, tech companies and other corporations are well known for their lack of white men.
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Re: Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
“Arguably the highest-profile media lawyer in America…”
The Hollywood Reporter, September 22, 2016
The “go-to lawyer” for a “violation of a famous person’s rights” “Mr. Harder’s emergence as a power player happened… through a combination of grit, talent, shrewd calculation—and knowing the right people.”
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Re: Re: Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
oops – 2020
Re: Re: Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
I’m not entirely sure what your list of PR fluff has to do with your original stream of idiocy, but Google can give you many more. For example:
"Attorneys Rip Trump Lawyer Charles Harder for ‘Absolutely Ridiculous’ Letter, Urge CNN to Tell Him to ‘Go F***’ Himself"
That seems more apt overall…
Re: Re: Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Is there a point to all that?
Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Your elaborate fantasy worlds get simultaneously more complex and more childish. That’s some kind of achievement, I guess…
Re: Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
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Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Wow, TechDirt being mentioned as a ‘tech’ company right up there with Google, Facebook, and Twitter. I, for one, am impressed this troll has elevated TD to that high of a position. Congrats guys you’ve made it! I love Tech Dirt, but its million unique visitors a month doesn’t hold a candle to Google, Facebook, Reddit, and Twitter.
Re: Techdirt CAUGHT by Project Veritas!
Obvious troll is obvious, but I could use some practice after having taken a break for a while.
It looks like Goldman Sachs actually thinks they have
A font of power.
Finally!
Several years ago, I penned a satirical version of David Bowie’s "Space Oddity," with Goldman Sachs substituted for Ground Control and a defensible moniker for Obama substituted for Major Tom. For publication, I was just waiting for the right font to set it to. I think I finally found it. 😉
Guess I'll use comic sans for business now
Now that Goldman’s font is unavailable, the next idea for my business would be to use comic sans.
Re: Guess I'll use comic sans for business now
Have you paid the inventor of Comic Sans for using it, Tero?
merciless … winks … 😉 😉 😉
Font copyright
Computer fonts can be copyrighted, because they include software (e.g., hinting). But their output, i.e. the typefaces, cannot be copyrighted. So, if you were to find examples of Goldman Sans around the web (say on GS’s site, or that "GOLDMAN SACHS SUCKS" image) you’d be perfectly free to screenshot each letter and build a message or even a new font out of them.
I have to believe the use of "myriad" was intentional.
Sorry, _ut the first three letters of the _lphet _re _opyrighted _nd tr__dem_rked the intelle_tu_l property of the _merin _ro_dsting _ompny, division of Wlt Disney In. _ny use of these letters in _re_ting fonts without prior _uthoriztion from Disney __st mem_er is infringement _nd will _e prose_uted to the fullest extent of the l_w.
Their own font?? Someone has to much time and money on their hands. Give it back to their customers
From time to time, I browse online repositories of free fonts and I’m always amazed at how many different fonts there are that look virtually identical with really nothing to distinguish them from each other. You could mix letters from a dozen different, but similar fonts in a single banner and nobody would give it a second look.