@Arne: as you suggested in #29, I researched  fontconfig configuration
files. If I put the attached file in my home directory (as
~/.fonts.conf), then Firefox no longer tries to use the Wine Tahoma
replacement when websites request it. I copied the syntax from an
example at
http://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Font_Configuration#Example_1

I disagree with your characterization of this bug. The original text is
at the top of the page, but you say "The bug here was that the embedded
bitmaps of Tahoma got used by default, where it's not desired." Those
things are not equivalent. A better description is "The bug here is that
Tahoma is installed and used *by the entire desktop*, where it's not
desired."

The average user would expect:
1. Install "wine" or "wine1.2".
2. Run Windows applications.

Instead they experience:
1. Install "wine" or "wine1.2".
2. Run Windows applications.
3. The appearance of many websites in Firefox changes.

Even as an experienced user, #3 is not obviously related to the wine1.2
package. It is also not an advertised effect of wine1.2; the package
description does not say, "Your web browser may start using the Tahoma
replacement that Synaptic will install by default as a dependency of
this package." Everyone commenting here, myself included, is surprised
by this unintended effect of installing wine1.2.

Some clarification (from Scott, maybe) would help: does Wine use
fontconfig in any way? If not, then it should be possible to apply the
setting I am using system-wide, so that only Wine applications use the
Tahoma replacement.

** Attachment added: ".fonts.conf"
   http://launchpadlibrarian.net/38191851/.fonts.conf

-- 
ttf-tahoma-replacement makes some web-sites look ugly
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/412195
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