All of these fonts use the Adobe-CNS1-4 Character Collection.
Adobe owns the trademarks.
Adobe MingStd-Light
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Configuration 5: Korean, (one face)
All of these fonts use the Adobe-Korea 1-2 Character Collection.
Adobe owns the trademarks.
Adobe Myungjo Std-Medium
Font Protection for Factory-Installed Fonts
The only RIP property used to protect factory-installed fonts is license
ID. Adobe assigns a unique license ID to each font bundle. For the fonts
to be accessible, the ID of the font bundle must match the license ID
specified by the RIP executable (Normalizer JTP). (Serial number and
product name are relevant to after-market fonts, but not factory-
installed fonts.)
Font protection for after-market fonts
Serial number, license ID, and product name properties of the RIP are
used together to protect after-market fonts. The license ID and product
name do not need to be unique on each hardware system. In the case
of a Prinergy system, the license ID and product name will be the same
for all component hardware systems.
The AppleTalk Font Downloader used to download the font must
derive a unique serial number from some characteristic of the target
hardware system. The AppleTalk Font Downloader encrypts the font
files with a key derived from the serial number, license ID, and product
name. For the font to be used or embedded into PDF on the target
system, the RIP (Normalizer JTP) on that system must have the same
serial number.
By default, and according to agreements with Morisawa, Adobe derives
the serial number from the MAC (medium access control) address of
the network card installed on the target system. This prevents the user
from copying the installed font files from the original target system to a
different system, and then using or embedding a font. To prevent the
user from downloading the font from various systems, typical after-
market font installers have a protection scheme that permits only a
limited number of installs (for example, three).
Fonts
319