Dotlicense is a set of smart contracts and JavaScript tooling to sell and verify software licenses (e.g. in-app-purchases or feature access tokens) using Ethereum. It supports both single purchase and (prepaid) subscriptions.
The licenses are ERC721-compatible Tokens. The client app holds the private key that owns the token.
The benefits are:
- Piracy deterring -- Because the private key is used to validate the license, owners are dis-incentivized to share that key. Because if the key is shared, for example, on a file-sharing site the license can be transferred, stolen, and sold.
- Surveillance free -- There is no "license server" tracking the user. Ownership of the token is validated by any Web3 provider (e.g. Infura or even a self-hosted node)
- Scarce -- The number of licenses available for a given product can be limited
- Transferable -- Users can transfer or resell their licenses (e.g. they can be auctioned on sites such as Rarebits or OpenSea)
- Cryptocurrency-based -- Normal-cryptocurrency benefits apply such as near-instant payments, permissionless, decentralized ownership, etc. No approvals, Stripe, Shopify store, or bank account necessary.
It is designed for software licenses in desktop or mobile apps. (And there is discussion about using it for subscription web apps.)
- Multiple products - Each product has its own inventory levels and total supply, housed in one contract
- Subscriptions - Products can (optionally) expire and be renewed by paying additional funds
- Affiliate program - Affiliates can get a cut of sales they refer with individual, whitelisted rates (including recurring affiliate revenue with subscriptions)
- Roles-based permissions - The store has three roles: CEO, CFO, and COO
- Full ERC-721 Compatibility - Each license issued is also an ERC-721-compatible token
- CLI Admin Tools - With Ledger hardware wallet support
- Embeddable Web3 Checkout - UMD JavaScript checkout button with Metamask support
Dotlicense is being used in Dottabot, a cryptocurrency trailing-profit stop bot built with Electron.
Dotlicense is split into several packages:
dot-license-contracts
holds the Solidity smart contracts that manage the sale and ownership of tokensdot-license-cli
is the CLI admin tools for managing the smart contractsdot-license-checkout
a customer checkout widget for purchases using Metamask and Reactdot-license-verifier
(open-sourced soon) is a JavaScript wrapper library for client apps that need to list products that are owned, verify the licenses, etc.
Additionally, this repo stores some utilities we've built along the way such as:
dot-abi-cli
- Generates a DApp CLI scaffold from an ABI (with Ledger support)
There are two main models in the contracts:
- The
Product
- which defines a feature or set of features and - The
License
- (the token) which defines ownership of an instance of aProduct
And during operation we have:
- The user (our customer) who is buying access to the features and
- The client (our software) which runs our application and enables new features on verified ownership
Product
s have:
- an
id
- a
price
- the quantity
available
- the
totalSupply
- the quantity
sold
And optionally, if the product is a subscription, it may have:
- a renewal
interval
, e.g. 1 month or 1 year in seconds - a
renewable
setting, which may be used to disable renewals of old plans
The client unlocks features of a given Product
id
if ownership of a License
is proven.
When a new product is created, the totalSupply
is fixed and cannot be changed. A totalSupply
of 0
means "unlimited".
When a new product is created, the renewal interval
is fixed and cannot be changed. An interval
of 0
means "unlimited".
The executives can:
- Create new
Product
s - Change the price for future sales of a
Product
- Change the inventory amount
available
as long as it does not violate thetotalSupply
- Change the product's
renewable
status
The License
represents ownership of one unit of a Product
. The License
is the same as a "token" - they have the same ID and the two are used interchangeably.
License
s have:
- an
id
- a
productId
, which points to theProduct
thisLicense
is for attributes
(uint256
), which are specific to this individualLicense
issuedTime
, which is the time when thisLicense
was created (i.e. minted)- an owner
And optionally:
- an
expirationTime
when thisLicense
expires - an
affiliate
address, who is credited for the original sale of thisLicense
A License
is created (that is, the token is minted) at time of sale. When a sale is made, the inventory for that Product
is decremented and ownership is transferred to the assignee
An expirationTime
of 0
means "does not expire".
The executives can:
- Issue promotional (free)
License
s, within the bounds of the supply - Issue promotional (free) renewal of
Licenses
The private key that owns the license must be readable by the client software.
In Dottabot this private key is:
- generated automatically by the software on installation and
- kept in OS secret storage (such as Keychain on Mac or
libsecret
on Linux).
In Dottabot, this means that while it is encrypted on disk, it is also readable by the software without user interaction. (It can also be deployed onto a VPS where a hardware wallet may not be available.)
Of course, this raises the problem of funds at purchase: often our users will have an existing wallet that they spend from (and it won't be our application's private key).
To deal with this issue, we require the user input the assignee
address at purchase time (that is, the address controlled by the client software). When the token is purchased, ownership of the token is given to the private key controlled by our software.
This helps fulfill the piracy deterrence requirement by incentivizing the user to keep the license private.
The smart contracts are split into modules.
-
LicenseAccessControl
- Defines the organizational roles and permission -
LicenseBase
- Defines theLicense
struct and storage -
LicenseInventory
- Controls theProduct
s and inventory for thoseProduct
s -
LicenseOwnership
- Implements ERC721 and defines ownership and transfer rights -
LicenseSale
- Implements minting tokens when a sale happens -
LicenseCore
- Is the core contract that is deployed to the network -
AffiliateProgram
- Defines a minimal affiliate program, with whitelisting
Issuance of new products and unsold inventory levels is centrally controlled. There are three roles:
- CEO
- CFO and
- COO
Some of the smart contract functions are open to anyone and some are restricted by role. The table below shows the permissions for each:
function | CEO | CFO | COO | anyone |
---|---|---|---|---|
LicenseAccessControl | ||||
setCEO |
✔ | |||
setCFO |
✔ | |||
setCOO |
✔ | |||
setWithdrawalAddress |
✔ | |||
withdrawBalance |
✔ | ✔ | ||
pause |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
unpause |
✔ | |||
LicenseBase | ||||
licenseProductId |
✔ | |||
licenseAttributes |
✔ | |||
licenseIssuedTime |
✔ | |||
licenseExpirationTime |
✔ | |||
licenseAffiliate |
✔ | |||
licenseInfo |
✔ | |||
LicenseInventory | ||||
createProduct |
✔ | ✔ | ||
incrementInventory |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
decrementInventory |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
clearInventory |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
setPrice |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
setRenewable |
✔ | ✔ | ✔ | |
priceOf |
✔ | |||
availableInventoryOf |
✔ | |||
totalSupplyOf |
✔ | |||
totalSold |
✔ | |||
intervalOf |
✔ | |||
renewableOf |
✔ | |||
productInfo |
✔ | |||
getAllProductIds |
✔ | |||
costForProductCycles |
✔ | |||
isSubscriptionProduct |
✔ | |||
LicenseOwnership (ERC721) | ||||
name |
✔ | |||
symbol |
✔ | |||
implementsERC721 |
✔ | |||
tokenMetadata |
✔ | |||
supportsInterface |
✔ | |||
setTokenMetadataBaseURI |
✔ | ✔ | ||
totalSupply |
✔ | |||
balanceOf |
✔ | |||
tokensOf |
✔ | |||
ownerOf |
✔ | |||
getApproved |
✔ | |||
isApprovedForAll |
✔ | |||
transfer |
✔ | |||
approve |
✔ | |||
approveAll |
✔ | |||
disapproveAll |
✔ | |||
takeOwnership |
✔ | |||
transferFrom |
✔ | |||
LicenseSale | ||||
setAffiliateProgramAddress |
✔ | |||
setRenewalsCreditAffiliatesFor |
✔ | |||
createPromotionalPurchase |
✔ | ✔ | ||
createPromotionalRenewal |
✔ | ✔ | ||
purchase |
✔ | |||
renew |
✔ | |||
LicenseCore | ||||
setNewAddress |
✔ | |||
unpause |
✔ |
dot-license-checkout
is a UMD (or React-component) library which embeds a Metamask-enabled checkout.
// React Component
const logo = require("path/to/logo.png");
const offers = [
{
productId: '1',
duration: ONE_YEAR,
name: '1 year',
price: 0.15
},
{
productId: '1',
duration: ONE_YEAR * 2,
name: '2 years',
price: 0.15 * 2
}
];
const config = {
httpProviderURL: 'https://rinkeby.infura.io/98sadfnjncadlh8',
licenseCoreAddress: '0xc3e2f9aADc4B5c467E0668C2d690a999A91A1a5C'
};
<DotLicenseCheckout
productName="Dottabot"
productSubheading="Unlimited License"
offerLabel="Years:"
offers={offers}
logo={logo}
httpProviderURL={config.httpProviderURL}
licenseCoreAddress={config.licenseCoreAddress}
/>
The CLI Admin tool has the following commands:
$ node ./bin/dot-license-cli.js --help
Usage: dot-license-cli.js <command> [options]
Commands:
dot-license-cli.js affiliateProgram Get the affiliate program address
dot-license-cli.js approve <to> <tokenId> Approves another address to claim for the ownership of the given token ID
dot-license-cli.js approveAll <to> Approves another address to claim for the ownership of any tokens owned by
this account
dot-license-cli.js getApproved <tokenId> Gets the approved address to take ownership of a given token ID
dot-license-cli.js availableInventoryOf <productId> The available inventory of a product
dot-license-cli.js balanceOf <owner> Gets the balance of the specified address
dot-license-cli.js ceoAddress Get the CEO's Address
dot-license-cli.js cfoAddress Get the CFO's Address
dot-license-cli.js clearInventory <productId> clearInventory clears the inventory of a product.
dot-license-cli.js cooAddress Get the COOs address
dot-license-cli.js createProduct <productId> <initialPrice> createProduct creates a new product in the system
<initialInventoryQuantity> <supply>
dot-license-cli.js decrementInventory <productId> <inventoryAdjustment> decrementInventory removes inventory levels for a product
dot-license-cli.js disapproveAll <to> Removes approval for another address to claim for the ownership of any
tokens owned by this account.
dot-license-cli.js getAllProductIds Get all product ids
dot-license-cli.js incrementInventory <productId> <inventoryAdjustment> incrementInventory - increments the inventory of a product
dot-license-cli.js isApprovedForAll <owner> <operator> Tells whether an operator is approved by a given owner
dot-license-cli.js licenseAttributes <licenseId> Get a license's attributes
dot-license-cli.js licenseInfo <licenseId> Get a license's info
dot-license-cli.js licenseIssuedTime <licenseId> Get a license's issueTime
dot-license-cli.js licenseProductId <licenseId> Get a license's productId
dot-license-cli.js name token's name
dot-license-cli.js newContractAddress Gets the new contract address
dot-license-cli.js ownerOf <tokenId> Gets the owner of the specified token ID
dot-license-cli.js pause called by any C-level to pause, triggers stopped state
dot-license-cli.js paused Checks if the contract is paused
dot-license-cli.js priceOf <productId> The price of a product
dot-license-cli.js productInfo <productId> The product info for a product
dot-license-cli.js purchase <productId> <assignee> <affiliate> Purchase - makes a purchase of a product. Requires that the value sent is
exactly the price of the product
dot-license-cli.js setAffiliateProgramAddress <address> executives *
dot-license-cli.js setCEO <newCEO> Sets a new CEO
dot-license-cli.js setCFO <newCFO> Sets a new CFO
dot-license-cli.js setCOO <newCOO> Sets a new COO
dot-license-cli.js setNewAddress <v2Address> Sets a new contract address
dot-license-cli.js setPrice <productId> <price> setPrice - sets the price of a product
dot-license-cli.js setWithdrawalAddress <newWithdrawalAddress> Sets a new withdrawalAddress
dot-license-cli.js symbol symbols's name
dot-license-cli.js takeOwnership <tokenId> Claims the ownership of a given token ID
dot-license-cli.js tokensOf <owner> Gets the list of tokens owned by a given address
dot-license-cli.js totalSold <productId> The total sold of a product
dot-license-cli.js totalSupply Gets the total amount of tokens stored by the contract
dot-license-cli.js totalSupplyOf <productId> The total supply of a product
dot-license-cli.js transfer <to> <tokenId> Transfers the ownership of a given token ID to another address
dot-license-cli.js transferFrom <from> <to> <tokenId> Transfer a token owned by another address, for which the calling address
has previously been granted transfer approval by the owner.
dot-license-cli.js unpause Unpause the contract
dot-license-cli.js withdrawBalance Withdraw the balance to the withdrawalAddress
dot-license-cli.js withdrawalAddress Get the withdrawal address
dot-license-cli.js info Describe contract info
Options:
--web3 web3 provider url [default: "http://localhost:8545"]
--from from address
--gasPrice gas price in wei to use for this transaction [default: "1000000000"]
--gasLimit maximum gas provided for this transaction [default: "6500000"]
--value The value transferred for the transaction in wei
--contract-address address to contract [required] [default: "0xb4f53a030f9d088198cdb66b8ad95aa79a95868f"]
--network-id The network ID [default: "101"]
--ledger use a ledger [boolean]
--hd-path hd-path (used for hardware wallets) [default: "44'/60'/0'/0"]
--help Show help [boolean]
--version Show version number [boolean]
Because licenses are verified on the client, this framework may be susceptible to at least two attacks: cracking and spoofing.
Like any desktop, mobile, or client-run app it may be possible for a determined hacker to patch the binary in such a way as to bypass the verification mechanism. Over time, we expect to improve our deterrence methods, but cracking is always a risk.
Because this software uses the Ethereum blockchain to verify ownership of a license-token, one could "spoof" ownership by directing their Web3 provider to a chain fork where they own a token, even when they may have transferred that token on the main net.
Again, we plan to implement a degree of 'main-chain' verification to make this difficult or cumbersome for an attacker to do. But forks are always a risk.
This attack could be mitigated by hosting your own Ethereum node and requiring pinning in your client app. However, the tradeoff here is by requiring the user to hit your server the user has reduced privacy and availability.
-
Q: Is there a fee to use these contracts?
-
A: No. This software is free to use and there are no "rents" extracted that go back to the Dotlicense team. (Of course, if you use the contracts, Ethereum transactions have fees.)
-
Q: Why must the client-software hold the private-key ownership of the tokens? Wouldn't it be better for the token to specify the 'allowed client' but restrict transfer to user-held key? This way a user could hold their license-tokens in e.g. a hardware wallet
-
A: If the user held the ownership private key independently, they could freely share a license key with no consequences. When the client application requires the private key, then there is incentive to keep it private (because otherwise the license may be stolen.)
-
Q: Why are these NFTs and not ERC20 fungible tokens?
-
A: Because each individual license has it's own attributes. These tokens are somewhat of a hybrid in that you may sell multiple copies of the same feature. However, the tokens aren't fully fungible either -- they each hold unique attributes.
-
Q: Do I have to pay affiliates?
-
A: No. Affiliates have a baseline rate, which can be zero. Individual affiliates can be whitelisted
(Coming soon)
If you're interested in using or developing Dotlicense, come join us on Telegram
With inspiration from: