
Software license
A software license is a license to use someone else computer program. The license states exactly what can and cannot do once obtained the software (eg. is a copy of the program allowed, how many users can use the same program, etc.). These license terms are defined in a contract (the license). EULA (end user license agreements or) is an agreement whereby the end user (often private) concludes a contract with the owner of the program.
By the Software act, computer programs are protected by copyright law (this is both operating system software and application software and games). This protection is often inadequate, so that the drafting of a software license is required.
MyLex assists you in selecting which rights are to be assigned in your software license. We advise where necessary so that your program meets the requirements for protection as stated in Art. 2, paragraph 1 of the Software act. We also deal with questions about the granted exclusive rights (integrity rights, reproductive rights, translation and editing rights and distribution rights).
Software license
A software license is a contract which indicates exactly what users can do with the software and clearly identifies the limitations (eg, copy, number of users, ...). Protect your software: contact us.
