Pirated fonts often lose their kerning data. This results in uneven, awkward spacing between letters that makes your final design look amateurish and unreadable.
Debian -- Details of package fonts-tlwg-laksaman-otf in trixie
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The phrase "commercial use please contact the copyright owner" seen on some font sites is when applied to Laksaman. Those sites have likely misapplied a generic disclaimer.
, Laksaman was designed to provide a high-quality, open-source alternative for Linux and cross-platform environments. Its name, derived from Pirated fonts often lose their kerning data
It is available in the Debian repositories as fonts-tlwg-laksaman-otf .
Even if you manage to extract a font file from a pirate site without catching a virus, the file itself is often corrupted. Pirated fonts frequently suffer from: Missing glyphs or broken kerning pairs. Inability to embed properly in PDFs. This link or copies made by others cannot be deleted
On Linux systems, issues with fontconfig can cause fonts to render incorrectly or "break" when scaled. Users on GitHub forums often suggest checking your fallback order using fc-match to ensure the system isn't trying to "fix" a missing glyph with a mismatched font.