20Hertz
Member
- Joined
- Apr 12, 2013
- Messages
- 19
- Reaction score
- 1
Hi Guys
I've been looking into software development with C# and I am currently on the licensing part of it. one of my WPF projects is almost complete (mainly just practice) so I took the time to do some reading about the licensing and for this one at least, I believe just a EULA will do.
my problem, that googling isn't answering, is the Company part of it. I went to eulatemplate.com and opened their EULA Generator and see that it requires me to enter a company name.
My question is this. If I do end up creating an application that I want to publish to, let's say the Microsoft Store, do I need to have a registered company? I was under the impression that I would be able to create and publish apps in my spare time without a registered company.
Also if I am able to generate a EULA by entering my own name instead of a company name, do I need to use my real name, or can I come up with an alias to use instead. Or even a "company name" that isn't registered. if things go well for me in this area then the plan is to eventually register a company. I'm just not so sure about doing it yet.
I've been looking into software development with C# and I am currently on the licensing part of it. one of my WPF projects is almost complete (mainly just practice) so I took the time to do some reading about the licensing and for this one at least, I believe just a EULA will do.
my problem, that googling isn't answering, is the Company part of it. I went to eulatemplate.com and opened their EULA Generator and see that it requires me to enter a company name.
My question is this. If I do end up creating an application that I want to publish to, let's say the Microsoft Store, do I need to have a registered company? I was under the impression that I would be able to create and publish apps in my spare time without a registered company.
Also if I am able to generate a EULA by entering my own name instead of a company name, do I need to use my real name, or can I come up with an alias to use instead. Or even a "company name" that isn't registered. if things go well for me in this area then the plan is to eventually register a company. I'm just not so sure about doing it yet.