Software License
Using software outside your licence scope can trigger six-figure audit claims.
Software licences define the exact scope of permitted use — number of users, devices, deployment environments, and permitted copying. Licence non-compliance, even unintentional, can result in audits, back-billing, and litigation. BrieflyGo maps your actual rights before you deploy.
What BrieflyGo checks
- Licence type (perpetual, subscription, named-user, concurrent)
- Permitted deployment environments (on-prem, cloud, SaaS)
- Number of authorised users or seats
- Sublicensing and distribution rights
- Audit rights and frequency
How it works
- Upload your document.
- AI scans clauses, definitions, and hidden obligations.
- BrieflyGo flags risk patterns and explains them in plain English.
- You get a report you can use before signing.
What risks are detected
Audit rights
Vendor can audit your usage at any time; findings of over-deployment lead to back-payment demands plus penalties.
Narrow deployment rights
"On-premises" licence used in a cloud VM is a licence violation — even on your own virtual infrastructure.
No sublicensing
Distributing a product that includes licensed components without a sublicence right exposes you to claims.
IP indemnification gaps
You may be liable if the licensed software infringes a third party’s IP — even as end user.
What AI checks
Why it matters
FAQ
Can BrieflyGo review a Software License?
Yes. Upload the Software License and BrieflyGo returns a plain-English scan focused on risky wording, hidden obligations, and negotiation pressure points.
Is this legal advice?
No. It's an educational AI risk scan designed to help you spot wording worth reviewing more closely.
When should I scan the draft?
Before you sign, and again after edits. Risk often changes during the final negotiation pass.
Ready?
Upload your Software License now
Upload a PDF, DOCX, or TXT. BrieflyGo returns a plain-English risk report you can negotiate from.
Glossary intersections
Legal terms that matter inside a Software License
A lighter-weight knowledge layer for the clause words, negotiation traps, and contract-risk patterns that usually sit behind this document.