We like our users to be able to install our application on at least two different machines. How does ByteShield handle that?
Many publishers will allow their customers to install an application on more than one machine. This is typical, and is often seen where a user has an office machine, a home machine, and maybe a laptop as well. Since the ByteShield system actually controls number of users, not number of installations, end users are not constrained from installing on multiple machines. The publisher can choose how many of those installations can be activated, thereby effectively limiting the number of machines. That means an end user is able to install the application wherever needed. Each instance must be activated, and when that occurs, the system will validate how many active instances are allowed. Activation permissions can be given to new machines as needed.
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