In case you missed it, and really give a hang:
German courts have ruled that using Google Fonts violates the EU General Data Protection Regulation, because the IP address of your computer is shared with Google when the fonts load.
So to be in compliance we'd have to have another dang banner asking the user to 'agree' before the page loads.
Solution: Don't call the fonts from Google.
as in:<link href='https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Sofia' rel='stylesheet'>
NO! NO!
Load 'em yourself into a site directory,
then in CSS,for example:
@font-face {
font-family: 'Montserrat-Italic-VariableFont_wght';
src: url('fonts/Montserrat-Italic-VariableFont_wght.ttf') format('truetype'), url('fonts/Montserrat-VariableFont_wght.ttf') format('truetype');
font-display:auto;
}
Page CSS:body, span, whatever {
font-family: 'Montserrat', arial, sans-serif;
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~}
Another addition to already annoying 'cookie', privacy, other 'mandatory' popups, alerts, warnings supposedly required by the damn internet Gods