If it were technically feasible, it would undoubtedly compress traffic numbers on a website or your website will be displayed with an Arial font that will have to act as a backup. There is therefore only one possible conclusion: Websites should avoid sharing the IP addresses of their web visitors in the context of Google Fonts (or Google Recaptcha) with Google or other third parties. For Google Fonts, this means local hosting. For Google Recaptcha, frankly, our technical knowledge fails us.
Maybe another recaptcha tool that doesn't send IP addresses to external servers will be the only solution there... We are currently investigating Tunisia Phone Number List further with our developer. Incidentally, the question remains whether these types of discussions are very good for the image of the GDPR and the general level of data protection in the EU. There are arguably far more pressing privacy issues than Google a correct font on a website... On the other hand, this is a topic that Google could perhaps communicate more openly about, so that marketers and web builders are more aware that even the choice of a font on a website can have GDPR implications. Attention web developers Web developers better be careful about the projects they deliver.

It is true that the owner of the website – i.e. the customer – will in principle be addressed as responsible for the processing of personal data by the supervisory authority in the context of checks or sanctions or by users in the context of a complaint for compensation. But web developers have a contractual obligation to provide a properly functioning and legally compliant website, in accordance with prevailing industry standards and practices. Otherwise, the customer could knock on the door to ask for compensation for the damage they would suffer.