EULA is neither should be a program nor a virus. EULA means End-User License Agreement. Inside the EULA file is the licensing of the software downloaded, copied, or installed.
AnswerEnd-User License Agreement (EULA)
AnswerEnd-User License Agreement (EULA)
AnswerEnd-User License Agreement (EULA)
EULA or End User License Agreement.
EULA, the End User License Agreement - it says what you can and can't do with the software.
End User License Agreement- agreement that the user of computer siftware accepts in order to use software. You may see this at the start of a software download as "terms of use".
Legally - NO ! If you install their software on a non-Apple machine - you violate the EULA (End User Licence Agreement).
Usually a licensing agreement attached to or embedded in the software (the end user licensing agreement, or EULA) will allow a certain number of copies to be made, for installation and backup. Further copying may be infringing.
Usually a licensing agreement attached to or embedded in the software (the end user licensing agreement, or EULA) will allow a certain number of copies to be made, for installation and backup. Further copying may be infringing.
EULA stands for "END-USER-LICENSE-AGREEMENT"
I believe you are asking about the abbreviation for "End User License Agreement," which is a common terminology in IT (information technology). It refers to the licensing of software. A "EULA" is a legal contract, made between the author (or publisher) of a software application and the user of that application. It can also be called a "software license." The EULA is similar to a rental agreement. By signing the EULA, the user agrees to comply with the terms of usage and the restrictions stated in the contract. For example, if you purchase an Apple product online, you will have to accept the company's terms of usage, such as agreeing not to make other copies of the software, nor trying to alter it in any way; failure to comply could result in the company suing you. I enclose a typical EULA so that you can see what terms and conditions the user must accept.