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Fourth IEEE International Workshop on Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks (POLICY'03)
Policy-Driven Licensing Model for Component Software
Lake Como, Italy
June 04-June 06
ISBN: 0-7695-1933-4
Qian Zhao, University of Western Ontario
Yu Zhou, University of Western Ontario
Mark Perry, University of Western Ontario
Today, it is almost inevitable that software is licensed, rather than sold outright. As a part of the licensing policy, some protectio mechanisms, whether hardware, legal or code-based, are invariably built into the license. The application of such mechanisms has primarily been in the realm of off-the-shelf, packaged, consumer software. However, as component-based software gradually becomes mainstream in software development, new component-oriented licensing systems are required. This paper proposes an enterprise component licensing model for the management of software component licenses. The model provides a comprehensive license management framework allowing for extensibility and flexibility. Furthermore, we identify differences between stand-alone software and component software, describe a high level model for policy-driven component licensing, and discuss both the benefits and drawbacks of the enterprise component licensing model for the management of software component licenses.
Citation:
Qian Zhao, Yu Zhou, Mark Perry, "Policy-Driven Licensing Model for Component Software," policy, pp.219, Fourth IEEE International Workshop on Policies for Distributed Systems and Networks (POLICY'03), 2003
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