

Surviving VLP License, a concurrent use license, an academic license (including a student edition license), a

NI may, in its discretion, charge you a fee for the transfer of the SOFTWARE. Of such transfer (including the name and location of such third party), such third party accepts the terms andĬonditions of this Agreement, and after such transfer, you do not retain any copies of the SOFTWARE (includingĪll Upgrades that you may have received) nor retain any of the written materials accompanying the SOFTWARE. Multiple Access Software, you may transfer the SOFTWARE to a third party provided that you notify NI in writing If you have a named user license, computer based license, debug license, or if the SOFTWARE is
#Labview for mac student serial number
I do know for sure that NI does actually care about ownership and has in the past contacted us about licenses that we have originally purchased and sold as part of a whole project, when the actual end user did register the serial number as their own, since the registering entity did not match the purchasing entity. Otherwise you may try to register the software at NI and then get told that you are not the rightful owner and when disputing that, the previous owner suddenly may claim to still own the license. I would insist on a document that names the serial number, states the previous owner and also grants an irrecoverable transfer of ownership of that license and serial number to you. Simply buying a CD ROM and a license serial number from anywhere might not really give you any rights. However you need to make sure that you do get the ownership. And in most places such a provision in the license agreement would be null and void. I'm not aware of any conditions that would disallow transfering the ownership of a LabVIEW license to someone else.
