Software licenses tend to work in conjunction with software source code escrow agreements[?].
This article deals primarily with the licenses of proprietary software distributed in the United States of America.
See also: Uniform Computer Information Transactions Act, Open source licenses
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The (FIXME) Act of (FIXME), codified as 17 USC 117 (http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/117), permits the owner of a copy of a computer program to make copies necessary for the use or backup of a computer program. Until 117 was enacted, the very act of copying computer software from a storage device into temporary memory may have been prohibited in the United States. Typically, a proprietary software license will interpret 117 in plain English. For example: "You may use the software on one computer, and you may make an additional copy to be used only for backup or archival purposes. You may not otherwise copy, modify [...] the software." However, a growing number of such licenses are using a loophole in 117 that exploits a distinction between the "owner" of a copy and one who merely "possesses" a copy by creating a rental agreement in which the publisher of the software retains ownership of the medium on which the software is shipped.
Most licenses for software sold at retail disclaim (as far as local laws permit) any warranty[?] on the performance of the software and limit liability for any damages to the purchase price of the software.
Some countries, such as the United States, allow the patenting of a generic computer that runs a novel algorithm. A software license may grant limited non-exclusive rights under applicable patents that the publisher holds.
Some software licenses prohibit users from reverse engineering the software. Publishers claim to use this to protect their trade secrets embodied in the software, but some have a different motive, namely making it much more difficult to create software that interoperates with the licensed software. Other licenses prohibit users from releasing data on the performance of the software.
Some proprietary software acts as a client for a network application and requires users to give up rights in consideration for access to a service. For example, the license of versions 4.0 and later of the AOL Instant Messenger client software prohibit users who have installed the software from ever accessing the service through third-party software such as Trillian, Gaim, or Everybuddy[?].
Whether or not publishers can actually enforce these software licenses in a given jurisdiction remains an open question. Recently, publishers have begun to encrypt their software packages to make it impossible for a user to install the software without agreeing to the license or violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act and foreign counterparts.
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