Adobe products religiously obey the copyprotect flag for very good reason - Adobe products are designed first and foremost for professional designers. Contrary to popular belief, they are not overpriced products for making lolcats, they're simply niche products that fulfill a professional need. Fonts are not licensed for display - to do so would be hideously impractical and incredibly expensive. Fonts are licensed per-designer-seat. Professional designers know and understand this. They also know and understand the potential repercussions should they be caught screwing up the licensing - costs to them, to their customers, etc. It is thus important that their tools not autonomously violate those licenses.Gonna go off on a tangent here, because I recently read some somewhat-related infuriating bullshit: I was recently reading a HCI design book by Alan Cooper (the man is a retard and psychopath whose only goal in life is to make money by ripping off other people's previously published work and restating common sense, and then publishing it in books that receive regular revisions where he alternates between adding and removing one or two sections of text) where he absolutely BLASTS Adobe Illustrator for having an "incomprehensible dialog box" regarding font licensing if you try to embed a font that you legally can't. It clearly states, in terms that designers use and understand what the problem is and why there is a problem. Cooper, in typical form, claims this message is incomprehensible (to professional designers, it's not). In fact, one of his favorite sources for examples is Adobe products, where he continually claims that various design-domain terminology is incomprehensible to the application's intended user. Maybe he missed the memo, but just because you're a self-proclaimed expert on user interface design doesn't mean you're a graphic design professional. In fact, I am also not a professional designer, and yet I know what every single incomprehensible thing he bitches about means. Why? Because I use Photoshop to make lolcats, and I live off and on with a graphic designer who is rather enthusiastic about her trade, and I don't mind learning. At some point, I really should write that twat a letter about this, and also include the bit about where he was applauding the interface design used on fighter jets where they carefully hid away the ejector seat handle so it can't be accidentally fired, despite a long and storied history of accidents involving mostly female pilots who have to mostly disrobe to take a pee during long-haul flights triggering their ejector seats by getting it caught in their flight suit. I don't expect that's a pretty sight, accidentally ejecting yourself from an airplane while you aren't strapped into your seat and are halfway out of your damned clothes.