This is an interesting question, despite being a magnet for pirate hunters. I will focus on the technical question and try to give some insight.
Looking at the OP's file, there are six fonts in it. Each one is basically a CSS rule; here's the first one in the example file:
@font-face {
font-family: "p22-underground-1";
font-style: normal;
font-weight: 400;
src: url("data:font/opentype;base64,d09GRk9...yn4b8C3JEZAA==");
}
This tells you everything that you need to know to identify the font. You can see its name (p22-underground-1) its style (normal), weight (400) and type (opentype).
As for decoding the font from base64 into a binary file, you need to take the base64 bit (shown above as d09GRk9...yn4b8C3JEZAA==
, note the bulk in the cenre has been removed to save space here) and decode it with a base64 decoder such as Motobit or by writing a program.
If you're on Linux, you can use base64 -d <file>
to achieve the same thing.
If the decoding fails, the base64 string may be also be percent-escaped. This isn't the case with the OP's example but I know of at least one site where this is the case.
You can check for this by looking for percent %
symbols in the base64 string. If percent characters are the only non-valid base64 characters then you can try to unescape the string prior to decoding.
There is a web site where you can do this or, again, for those on Linux, a command-line method is shown below (there are many ways to do this; this one uses Perl):
perl -MURI::Escape -lne 'print uri_unescape($_)' < file.b64_escaped > file.b64
I wrote a small tool in Ruby that takes a url and dumps any embedded fonts into files using the above techniques so I can say that they do work.