Although Mangal is widely used especially on the UNICODE-driven platforms (and not as in True Type texts), Arial Unicode or others are also equally popular, and hence any chance of confusion or the slightest possibility of phishing should be dealt with. Once we set up rules to disambiguate these instances, it would apply across fonts for Domain Name Registration.

Regards,

Professor Udaya Narayana Singh  
Chair-Professor & Head, ACLiS
Amity Centre for Linguistic Studies (ACLiS)
Amity University Haryana, Gurgaon
Pachgaon, Manesar PIN 122431
Cell: +91-98301-32234 & 94340-50218

Formerly, Pro-Vice-Chancellor, Visva-Bharati, Santiniketan &
Former Director, Central Inst of Indian Languages (CIIL)
Home-page www.udayanarayana.com




On Monday 24 July 2017, 6:43:48 AM IST, Bal Krishna Bal <bkbal@ltk.org.np> wrote:


Hello Akshat and the NBGP members,
In our recent discussions on confusable composite characters, we have noticed that the confusion is only prominent across certain fonts and not with all universally. I have attached a few samples  where the strings and the respective fonts are highlighted in yellow. The question is - are we considering font specific issues here? Are there any fonts being considered to be used as default ones to display Devanagari text on the browser's address bar?
Regards,
Bal Krishna

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