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  2. Per-seat license - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Per-seat_license

    A per-seat license (or "named user license") [1] is a software license model based on the number of individual users, known as 'seats' in reference to them sitting in an office chair at a workstation, who have access to a digital service or product. For example, 50-user per-seat license would mean that up to 50 individual named users can access ...

  3. Volume licensing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Volume_licensing

    In software licensing, volume licensing is the practice of using one license to authorize software on a large number of computers and/or for a large number of users. . Customers of such licensing schemes are typically business, governmental or educational institutions, with prices for volume licensing varying depending on the type, quantity and applicable subscripti

  4. Zoom (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoom_(software)

    By the end of its first month, Zoom had 400,000 users. By 2013, Zoom had more than one million users. [10] After the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, by February 2020, Zoom had gained 2.22 million users in 2020 – more users than it amassed in the entirety of 2019. [11] [12] In March 2020, the Zoom app was downloaded 2.13 million times. [13] [14]

  5. Zoom Communications - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoom_Communications

    Former logo (2014-2022) Zoom was founded by Eric Yuan, a former corporate vice president for Cisco Webex. [6] He left Cisco in April 2011 with 40 engineers to start a new company, [2] originally named Saasbee, Inc. [7] The company had trouble finding investors because many people thought the videotelephony market was already saturated. [7]

  6. Client access license - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Client_access_license

    Commercial apps are licensed to end users or businesses: in a legally binding agreement between the proprietor of the software (the "licensor") and the end user or business (the "licensee"), the licensor gives permission to the licensee to use the app under certain limitations, which are set forth in the license agreement.

  7. Software license - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_license

    Traditionally, software was distributed in the form of binary object code that could not be understood or modified by the user, [9] but could be downloaded and run. The user bought a perpetual license to use a particular version of the software. [14]

  8. Software license manager - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_license_manager

    A software license manager is a software management tool used by independent software vendors or by end-user organizations to control where and how software products are able to run. License managers protect software vendors from losses due to software piracy and enable end-user organizations to comply with software license agreements.

  9. Software license server - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Software_license_server

    It is the job of a software license server to determine and control the number of copies of a program permitted to be used based on the license entitlements that an organization owns. Typically, an end-user customer organization will install a software license server on a host computer to provide licensing services to an enterprise computing ...