Now I am sending an email to Gmail with some information about the equipment my program runs on and where to find the web interface. Then I manually look through these emails to see if the hardware for a particular programming changes a lot (dozens of computers that send emails, not the one to whom I sent it) if I manually go to the web interface and enter 'kill -switch "to disable this copy by wiping the xml file that the program should run. However, it is easy for the user to reverse it by simply installing the program.
I know almost nothing about web code and licensing. I am more than willing to learn, but it seems to overwhelm what I am doing.
To be more specific - is there a way to do this without using any kind of web server? If not the easiest web server approach for someone who doesn't have network coding?
You must block your program on the HWID of a unique computer. On the first start, install the hwid of the computer on the server and at startup check if hwid is different .. if different close the program
How about adding license codes and installing them. Create an algorithm that is complex enough and save all possible keys inside the program.
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