Last Updated: May 16, 2026
This page gives a public-facing summary of the software license position reflected in DMVI's current sales and services agreement templates.
In plain English: the software is licensed, not sold; source code is not included; annual cloud-license fees matter; and reverse engineering is off limits.
This page should be read together with the controlling quote, invoice, exhibit, statement of work, and other signed commercial paperwork.
Contents
1. Scope of This EULA
This page summarises the baseline software-license position reflected in DMVI's current sales and services agreement templates for controller software, cloud services, APIs, Android-based machine software, and related software-enabled components.
If a signed agreement, invoice, proposal, exhibit, or statement of work says something more specific, that more specific written document controls.
2. License Grant
The sales agreement describes a worldwide, transferable license that is inseparable from the products. The services agreement describes a limited, nonexclusive license to use the software comprising the proposed solution.
Digital Media Vending International LLC retains the right to frame the exact grant in the controlling agreement, but the consistent baseline is that the software is licensed, not sold, and the customer receives only the rights expressly granted in writing.
The license does not include access to, or the right to obtain, source code.
3. Ownership and Reserved Rights
DMVI expressly reserves all rights in the licensed software that are not specifically granted to the customer. Title and ownership remain with DMVI or the relevant third-party supplier, as applicable.
Unless DMVI agrees otherwise in writing, those reserved rights also extend to adaptations, translations, customisations, and derivative works created by DMVI.
4. Annual License Fees and Ongoing Cloud Access
The agreements state that annual licensing fees are required for ongoing cloud-service access and may change over time.
Under the sales agreement, the first-year licensing fee is included on the invoice. Renewal invoices are due within seven calendar days of receipt, after which the fee is late. If the licensing fee remains late for thirty days, DMVI may terminate software access and the products may no longer be operational.
The services agreement also states that the current software license fee is provided in the relevant fee exhibit and is due yearly.
5. Restrictions on Use
- Do not reverse engineer or decompile the licensed software.
- Do not attempt to obtain source code unless a written agreement expressly permits it.
- Do not use the software outside the scope of the permitted product or proposed solution deployment.
- Do not treat the license as a sale of the software or of DMVI's underlying intellectual property.
- Do not disregard separate third-party license terms that govern third-party components included in the solution.
6. Front-End API and Customer IP
The sales agreement separately contemplates that some products may include access to a Front-End Development API so the customer can create a customised user interface application.
Where that feature is actually provided, the customer retains ownership of its own logos, graphics, trademarks, copyrights, and other customer intellectual property used in that application, while third-party software remains governed by its own license terms.
7. Updates and Support Limits
The sales agreement states that DMVI reserves the right, but is not obligated, to provide software updates to the control app, cloud server, or related software components.
Nothing on this page should be read as a promise of indefinite updates, patches, maintenance, or feature expansion unless a separate written support or services commitment says so.
8. Termination or Loss of Access
Software access can be affected by non-payment of annual licensing fees, breach of the controlling agreement, or termination rights set out in the relevant sales or services documents.
When the license ends or DMVI validly terminates software access under the controlling agreement, the customer must stop using the affected software except to the extent a more specific written agreement says otherwise.
DMVI may update this page from time to time as software architecture, licensing structure, and commercial documentation evolve.
