I accepted "Apple Developer Program License Agreement ", but it is not hide [closed] - licensing

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I accepted "Apple Developer Program License Agreement" in the Member Center, but the notification is not hide in the iTunes Connect. I don't have in the Member Center any License Agreement in this moment. What do I do?
It includes following
Agreements, Tax, and Banking
Review the Paid Applications Schedule.
The iOS paid applications schedule (“iOS Schedule 2”) and the Mac paid application Agreement schedule (“Mac Schedule 2”) have been combined into a single Schedule 2 covering both programs, and the Custom B2B schedules (“Schedule 3”) for iOS and Mac have been combined as well. To create new paid apps and in-app purchases and upload binaries to the App Store, the user with the Legal role must review and accept the Paid Applications Schedule (Schedule 2 to the Apple Developer Program License Agreement) in the Agreements, Tax, and Banking module.
To accept this agreement, the user with the Team Agent role must have
already accepted the Apple Developer Program License Agreement in the
Member Center.

Additional to Member Center you need to go to "Agreements, Tax, and Banking" in iTunesconnect and on top you will see a row with your address and some info. Next to it there is a button "Amendments". There is no word of "Schedule 2" or "Schedule 3" whatsoever. You have to click on this "Amandments" and procceed by accepting. After that everything will be fine. For some reason I was not expecting it to be behind this "Amandements" so hope it might help also somebody else. If you don't have "Agreements, Tax, and Banking" in iTunesConnect, you need user with Legal role in order to do that.

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Does google map API work without billing address? [closed]

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It is not accepting any of my cards. Please help me which card is required for billing address or is it possible to use map API without billing address?
It used to be possible, but not any more.
However, the good new are:
You won't be charged until your usage exceeds $200 in a month. Note that the Maps Embed API, Maps SDK for Android, and Maps SDK for iOS currently have no usage limits and are at no charge (usage of the API or SDKs is not applied against your $200 monthly credit).
Note that they will verify your card by making a small transaction (like 1 dollar or something)
If you are having an error while you are registering a card:
Make sure your card & address information is up to date
Submit any extra information that is requested
Check you have sufficient funds for the purchase
Contact your bank or card issuer
You may fix your issue by visiting this one: https://support.google.com/a/answer/2523116?hl=en
Or
You can contact them to help you about your cards here: https://support.google.com/paymentscenter/?hl=en#topic=9017576

Licensing on enterprise application [closed]

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I am developing an enterprise application including central database, MVC web app, Mobile app client, web services and WPF client Windows service application which are working all together, I am going to make a contract with a company to grant them exclusive re-seller Representation .
So I am thinking a way to control the number of sales and provide them a license key for each sale to they could use the key in installation or other step and I want to get informed by the application whenever it is installing somewhere and want to prevent working when the license is used once or is expired or something. I need a solution from people who have same successful experience in this matter, indeed I have some ideas but actually I am not experienced in this issue and I'll be so happy to hear good approaches on this.
Thanks in advance ...
First you need to choose your preferred licensing system. A small list is available in the Question about OS Licensing Components. Second you'll need some kind of service where your reseller can issue licenses without real access to your private license key. E.g. some kind of webservice.
Then you'll have the number of licenses that your reseller has created and you can bill him.
If you also want to know which licenses was activated you can implement some kind of "phone home" in your application.

Do I need to purchase an iTextSharp license for an intranet application? [closed]

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This question may have been answered already, but I haven't been able to find an answer matching my scenario. I'm trying to understand when it's required to purchase a license for iTextSharp.
I want to use iTextSharp in an intranet application within a for-profit company. Can I use the free version? Or am I required to purchase a license? I will not be selling the application or the source code. The application will be used internally by members of the organization.
The issue is not about the internal/external use. It's not even about selling the application or not. It's just a matter of license:
If you release you application under a AGPL-compatible license, you don't need to purchase an iText commercial license.
In not, you'll have to contact their sales department, and purchase one.

How to create an appropriate license agreement for your own Software? (Mac AppStore) [closed]

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Background:
This question caused me some sleepless nights over the last month. I'm an independent software developer and have recently finished the work on my first application. I've read a lot of articles about license agreements but I still don't know how to tackle this task in an appropriate way. My application handles user files. In every method I check for consistency & errors and I've betatested it on several systems for more than 6 months. I'm very sure nothing should go wrong, but I want to be on the save side.
Are license agreements by themselves protected by a copyright or can
I just take one and replace the companies name? (All of them look pretty similar to my untrained eyes)
If I'm allowed to use one, am I allowed to edit it?
I don't want my users to be "kept in a cage". I want them to be as free as they could be. For example I want them to be able to freely install my software on all their personal devices.
Where can I find non-Opensource licenses*? I've been searching for a
long time now. I found this Page but it actually confused me more than it helped.
I plan on publishing my app on the Mac-AppStore. Are there licenses
I can't use there?
(As I mentioned above I want a "User License" model that allows the user to install it on all of his Macs)
If you've got any kind of experience with this topic, feel free to share your insights. It's well appreciated!
*Edit: By "non-Opensource licenses" I mean licenses for commercial applications.
1.
You are free to take an existing agreement you find and adapt it to your ends. There is no originality of expression in a licensing agreement itself that would be covered under copyright law preventing your use of its language -- assuming the language fits your circumstances. You should always understand what you're agreeing to. :-)
P.S. Authority: I've worked with large law firms for 20 years as a software developer, licensing my software to them and also consulting with some of them when they had to write contracts for their own clients and didn't undertand the technical issues.

Community License Agreement for Commercial (SaaS) software? [closed]

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I've got a commercial SaaS application, an online collaboration/lean project mgmt tool. I want to offer a "Community Edition", with specific limitations on how the software can be used, for free. For example
free for groups using it to manage open source projects
free to K-12 teachers to use in the classroom
free for authors collaborating on Lean/Kanban/AgileSoftwareDevelopment books and research papers.
free for community conference organizers, user group organizers, etc.
The license would grant use of the software with limitations. The software itself can enforce limitations on the number of users/projects. I'm looking for a license agreement / EULA that I can use to specify what uses the software can be used for (see above). It would restrict the users from using it in different ways, such as for commercial use, managing consulting projects, client work, etc.
I've been combing the web for good examples of such agreements, and so far coming up short. Any ideas? To be clear, this would not be an open source license of any kind. It would cover the use of commercial software, for specific "community" uses, as we define them.
I'd pay a lawyer and have him write up the EULA.
You'll forget something, or have some sort of loophole you won't notice.
It's always best to ask for legal advice from a lawyer.
You could do worse than start with a terms of service document. Some companies and products have put their TOS under the Creative Commons license, so you would be free to use that to get started. You could have a look at the one from Wordpress for instance.
Have a look at how Atlassian or JetBrains do it. They offer Jira instances/IntellijIDEA licenses for open source projects and project committers and have been doing so for a long time with great success.
If you start without a fully prepared license agreement, at least do not forget to state that the license is subject to change at any time and the user agrees to any future change or has to stop using the service immediately.

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