1. Technical Field
The present disclosure relates generally to the distribution of digital products and more specifically to techniques for linking software applications to a user account on an online store.
2. Introduction
Manufacturers of electronic devices commonly offer customers a variety of available options to personalize and customize an electronic device prior to purchase. For instance, a personal computing device such as a computer can be customized by selecting the processor, memory, hard drive, or accessories. Manufacturers also cooperate with various software vendors to offer software applications or programs that can be purchased along with the computer and pre-installed before the customer takes delivery of the computer. Some software applications, which typically are created by the manufacturer but can also include third-party applications, can be pre-installed on the computing device free of charge either manually or as part of a default factory image, for example. Therefore, the hardware components and the pre-installed software can be personalized by a customer to ensure that the purchased product meets the customer's needs.
After the customer receives the electronic device, the customer may sometime in the future desire to reinstall or update the pre-installed software. For example, a software provider may have released an updated version of the software pre-installed on the electronic device. This is commonly known as a software update. To obtain the software update, the customer visits a physical or online store of the software provider and purchases or acquires the updated version of the software. However, this process is time consuming and sometimes confusing. Similarly, when a purchaser reformats the storage of the electronic device, the purchaser must typically reinstall the software. During reinstallation, the purchaser may be prompted for various compact discs (CDs) or other media containing the pre-installed software. However, the purchaser may have misplaced the CDs, thus making the reinstallation procedure quite cumbersome.
Additional features and advantages of the disclosure will be set forth in the description which follows, and in part will be obvious from the description, or can be learned by practice of the herein disclosed principles. The features and advantages of the disclosure can be realized and obtained by means of the instruments and combinations particularly pointed out in the appended claims. These and other features of the disclosure will become more fully apparent from the following description and appended claims, or can be learned by the practice of the principles set forth herein.
Disclosed are systems, methods, and non-transitory computer-readable storage media for associating an application (i.e., software package), a pre-installed application or a separately purchased application with a user account. The user account can be associated or stored on an online store. This process can be called adoption. Adoption can provide the user account with certain privileges, such as downloading, re-downloading, and updating of applications. In other examples, adoption can configure the user account to permit other privileges with respect to the adopted application, such as gifting adopted applications or selling adopted applications. In one common scenario, a new computer includes certain pre-installed software. A user can run and use the pre-installed software on the new computer. However, in order to receive and/or be eligible for updates, backups, and/or other software-related content or services, the user can ‘adopt’ the pre-installed software. By adopting the pre-installed software, the pre-installed software is associated with a particular user account, such as an online electronic store account. Then the online electronic store can handle updates, backups, restores, in-application purchases, and so forth. However, a user can opt to use the pre-installed software without ‘adopting’ the pre-installed software with full functionality except for features relying on a user account or access to the online electronic store account. When a user adopts pre-installed software, the online electronic store can modify the account, a database, and/or the software itself so that the pre-installed software is ineligible for adoption by another user. In another common scenario, a software package or application that has been purchased, gifted, or otherwise acquired by a user is installed on a user's computing device. The computing device may transmit a software adoption request to a server for adoption of the software package or application with a user account. The software adoption request can include an indication of the software package and an identifier associated with the user account. In some examples, a proof of entitlement is also included in the adoption request as proof to the authenticity of the software package. The proof of entitlement can be a value derivable only from possession of the software package. For example, the proof of entitlement can be associated with or derived from a serial number of the software package. The proof of entitlement can also be a value derivable from the software package and metadata associated with the electronic device. For example, metadata associated with the electronic device can be a value derivable from hardware associated with the electronic device. Updates, backups, and/or other software related content or services can be available to the user once the application has adopted.
A system configured to practice the method presents an application available for download, receives a request to download the application to a computing device, and determines that the application is a pre-installed application. Then the system presents an authorization prompt configured to request user authorization to link the application with a user account, receives the user authorization, and, in response to receiving the user authorization, generates a unique hardware identifier or retrieves a proof of entitlement associated with the computing device. The system determines that the application is linkable based upon the unique hardware identifier or proof of entitlement, and links the adoptable application with the user account when the adoptable application is linkable. The system can present the application available for download by receiving a request for an updates page, and, in response to receiving the request, collecting a stub receipt associated with the application. The stub receipt can include a version number and a name associated with the application. Then the system determines, based upon the version number and the name, that an update of the application is available on a server for download, and presents the name of the application.
Alternatively, the system can present the application available for download by receiving a request for a purchases page, receiving a manifest associated with the computing device, and presenting a list of pre-installed applications based on the manifest. The manifest can include a list of pre-installed applications available for download from a server where the list of pre-installed applications includes the application. The system can determine that the application has an update available on a server by searching an applications database and comparing the version number of the application stored on the computing device with the version number of the application stored on the applications database. Based on a comparison of the version numbers, a determination can be made as to whether an update to the application exists on the applications database. The system can determine that the application is a pre-installed application by determining that the application is associated with a stub receipt. The system can determine that the application is a pre-installed application by receiving a manifest associated with the computing device, the manifest including a list of pre-installed applications, and determining that the application is included within the list of pre-installed applications. The system can determine that the pre-installed application is linkable by transmitting the unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase to a server, and determining whether the pre-installed application has been linked with another user account. In yet other examples, the system links the pre-installed application with the user account by associating the pre-installed application with the user account, and updating a uniqueness table to include the unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase. The uniqueness table can include another unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase that is associated with another electronic device having another pre-installed application, and the another pre-installed application can be linked with another user account.
In another variation, the system receives a request to link a pre-installed application with a user account on an online store, the online store configured to transmit applications associated with the user account to one or more computing devices associated with the user account. Then the system generates a unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase associated with a computing device, and determines that the pre-installed application is linkable based upon the unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase. The system links the pre-installed application with the user account when the pre-installed application is linkable. The unique hardware identifier can be based upon one or more hardware components of the electronic device, such as a MAC address, universal device identifier (UDID), a logic board serial number, or an Ethernet hardware address. In other examples a proof of purchase can be used. The proof of purchase can be based on hardware components of the electronic device, metadata associated with the gifting, purchasing, or acquisition of the application. Determining that the pre-installed application is linkable can include transmitting the unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase to a server, and determining whether the pre-installed application or proof of purchase has been linked with another user account. The system can determine that the pre-installed application is linkable by determining that an original configuration of the computing device includes the pre-installed application. Linking the pre-installed application with the user account can include associating the pre-installed application with the user account, updating a uniqueness table to include the unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase, the uniqueness table including another unique hardware identifier or proof of purchase that is associated with another electronic device having another pre-installed application, the another pre-installed application having been linked with another user account. In yet another example, linking the pre-installed application with the user account further includes removing metadata associated with the pre-installed application from a manifest, the manifest being configured to list pre-installed applications that have yet to be linked with the user account. The system can download the pre-installed application to the computing device.
In order to describe the manner in which the above-recited and other advantages and features of the disclosure can be obtained, a more particular description of the principles briefly described above will be rendered by reference to specific embodiments thereof which are illustrated in the appended drawings. Understanding that these drawings depict only exemplary embodiments of the disclosure and are not therefore to be considered to be limiting of its scope, the principles herein are described and explained with additional specificity and detail through the use of the accompanying drawings in which:
Various embodiments of the disclosure are discussed in detail below. While specific implementations are discussed, it should be understood that this is done for illustration purposes only. A person skilled in the relevant art will recognize that other components and configurations may be used without parting from the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
The present disclosure addresses the need in the art for associating pre-installed software on an electronic device to a user account on a distribution center or online store. The present disclosure also addresses the need in the art for associating other types of software besides pre-installed software with a user account. For example, purchased software, software received as a gift, software distributed for free or a nominal charge from a software manufacturer, or software acquired using other methods can be associated with a user account on an online store or shop. This process can be termed “adoption” of software by the user account in the online store. By associating software with a user account on an online store, software updates and reinstallations can be downloaded from an online store, thus proving an easier, more convenient way of managing software on an electronic device. Furthermore, other computing devices associated with the user account can also receive software updates and reinstallations from the online store. The following description in
With reference to
The system bus 110 may be any of several types of bus structures including a memory bus or memory controller, a peripheral bus, and a local bus using any of a variety of bus architectures. A basic input/output (BIOS) stored in ROM 140 or the like, may provide the basic routine that helps to transfer information between elements within the computing device 100, such as during start-up. The computing device 100 further includes storage devices 160 such as a hard disk drive, a magnetic disk drive, an optical disk drive, tape drive or the like. The storage device 160 can include software modules 162, 164, 166 for controlling the processor 120. Other hardware or software modules are contemplated. The storage device 160 is connected to the system bus 110 by a drive interface. The drives and the associated computer readable storage media provide nonvolatile storage of computer readable instructions, data structures, program modules and other data for the computing device 100. In one aspect, a hardware module that performs a particular function includes the software component stored in a non-transitory computer-readable medium in connection with the necessary hardware components, such as the processor 120, bus 110, display 170, and so forth, to carry out the function. The basic components are known to those of skill in the art and appropriate variations are contemplated depending on the type of device, such as whether the device 100 is a small, handheld computing device, a desktop computer, or a computer server.
Although the exemplary embodiment described herein employs the hard disk 160, it should be appreciated by those skilled in the art that other types of computer readable media which can store data that are accessible by a computer, such as magnetic cassettes, flash memory cards, digital versatile disks, cartridges, random access memories (RAMs) 150, read only memory (ROM) 140, a cable or wireless signal containing a bit stream and the like, may also be used in the exemplary operating environment. Non-transitory computer-readable storage media expressly exclude media such as energy, carrier signals, electromagnetic waves, and signals per se.
To enable user interaction with the computing device 100, an input device 190 represents any number of input mechanisms, such as a microphone for speech, a touch-sensitive screen for gesture or graphical input, keyboard, mouse, motion input, speech and so forth. An output device 170 can also be one or more of a number of output mechanisms known to those of skill in the art. In some instances, multimodal systems enable a user to provide multiple types of input to communicate with the computing device 100. The communications interface 180 generally governs and manages the user input and system output. There is no restriction on operating on any particular hardware arrangement and therefore the basic features here may easily be substituted for improved hardware or firmware arrangements as they are developed.
For clarity of explanation, the illustrative system embodiment is presented as including individual functional blocks including functional blocks labeled as a “processor” or processor 120. The functions these blocks represent may be provided through the use of either shared or dedicated hardware, including, but not limited to, hardware capable of executing software and hardware, such as a processor 120, that is purpose-built to operate as an equivalent to software executing on a general purpose processor. For example the functions of one or more processors presented in
The logical operations of the various embodiments are implemented as: (1) a sequence of computer implemented steps, operations, or procedures running on a programmable circuit within a general use computer, (2) a sequence of computer implemented steps, operations, or procedures running on a specific-use programmable circuit; and/or (3) interconnected machine modules or program engines within the programmable circuits. The system 100 shown in
Having disclosed some components of a computing system, the disclosure now returns to a discussion of techniques for associating (which is analogous to linking or adopting) pre-installed software on a computing device such as a personal computer, laptop, game console, smart phone, mobile phone, or tablet PC to a user account in an online application distribution store or market. The approaches set forth herein can improve the efficiency and convenience of upgrading or reinstalling pre-installed software onto a computing device by linking the pre-installed software to a user account on an online distribution site such as an online store or distribution center. The online distribution site transmits the pre-installed software associated with a user account to one or more computing devices that are linked to the user account. The pre-installed software and updates to the pre-installed software can both be transmitted to the one or more computing devices. In some examples, the distribution site can specify a limit to the number of computing devices associated with a given user account that can receive software associated with the given user account. In other examples, the pre-installed software is part of a standard ‘image’ that is generated once and replicated to each of a group of devices. For example, a standard device ‘image’ can include an operating system, drivers, programs, settings, and so forth. Thus, each imaged device has an identical software configuration, including the pre-installed software, and after the end-user (or other entity) sets up the device, the pre-installed software can be adopted and associated with a user account in an online store or marketplace.
Computing device 260 can include applications 261. Applications 261 can include applications that were pre-installed on computing device 260, provided as part of a package, or for which some kind of installation media was provided. In one common scenario, the owner of computing device 260 purchased the computing device 260 from the manufacturer with these applications already installed. Applications 261 can also include applications (or software packages) that were acquired by computing device 260 through other means such as applications that were gifted, purchased, or freely distributed, to name a few. Applications 261 can also include applications that were purchased from distribution center 210 by a user of computing device 260. To purchase desired applications from distribution center 210, a user logs into user account 291, which contains metadata associated with applications that the user has already purchased and metadata associated with payment information for making payments to distribution center 210 in exchange for desired applications. Once logged in, the user may select a desired application to purchase. When the user agrees to pay the purchase price of the application, the user's payment information is used to complete the transaction. Once the transaction is completed, the desired application is associated with user account 291, thus allowing the user to download the desired application and also updates of the desired application. Applications associated with user account 291 can also be updated or re-downloaded onto other devices that are associated with user account 291.
In some examples, the user can have the option to not associate the application with the user account at this point in time. For example, a user who receives an application as a gift may not have a user account or wish to associate the application with his user account. In the first scenario, computing device 260 can allow the user to install the application without requiring the user set up a user account. If the user wishes to receive updates or install the application on other electronic devices he owns, then the user can elect a user account and link (i.e., adopt) the application with his user account. In this example, computing device 260, computing device 270, and portable device 280 are all associated with user account 291 and thus, are configured to receive updates and re-downloads of all applications that have been associated with user account 291. Moreover, portable device 280 can communicate with computing device 270 to transfer digital data and applications between the two devices. In one example, computing device 270 may be configured to be a central repository containing all applications associated with user account 291 and transfer selected applications to portable device 280. In this specification, the term “application” refers to a copy of a software program or application provided by a software provider. In other examples, other digital products besides software applications and software programs (such as system software, enterprise software, multimedia files, video files, audio files, and image files) that were initially pre-installed on a computing device, such as software applications where the user has a right of ownership, can also be associated with user account 291 and distributed/re-distributed by distribution center 210.
Distribution center 210, which is coupled to applications database 220, is configured to sell, deliver, and maintain applications from applications database 220. Applications database 220 can be configured to store some or all of the applications available for distribution from server side 240. The applications can be sold, updated, and delivered (i.e., transmitted) to a device in client side 290 through the Internet 250. As such, distribution center 210 represents an online store for applications. For example, applications database 220 can receive a request from distribution center 210 for an application and in response to the request, transmits the requested application to distribution center 210, which subsequently transmits the application to the requesting device. The applications requested may be applications available for purchase or applications previously associated with a user account (i.e., separately acquired or pre-installed applications that have been adopted). In other examples, applications database 220 can directly transmit the requested application to the requesting device. In yet other examples, applications database 220 can reside on the client side 290 where the server side 240 can grant access to particular applications of applications database 220 based on applications associated with the user account.
A device of client side 290 can transmit a software adoption request to link (i.e., associate or adopt) a pre-installed application or otherwise acquired but not adopted application on the device with a user account. Linking an application allows the user to associate the application with a user account, thus allowing the user to download the application to other devices also associated with the same user account. This process can be called “linking”, “adopting”, or “associating” an application. For example, computing device 260 can request to link an application from applications 261 with user account 291. The request can be transmitted along with a unique identifier associated with the application or computing device 260 (e.g., unique hardware identifier) to distribution center 210 via the Internet 250 to determine whether the application can be associated with user account 291. A unique hardware identifier is a unique identifier based upon hardware of the device that is used to distinguish a particular device from all other devices. For example, a manufacturer can ensure that each device manufactured includes a unique hardware identifier that is unique and thus different than the unique hardware identifier of any other device. As an example, a unique hardware identifier can be based upon the logic board serial number and/or the Ethernet hardware address of the device. In one example, these two values can be concatenated and hashed to generate the unique hardware identifier. In other examples, other metadata specific to the device may be concatenated, hashed, or otherwise combined using a variety of data manipulation algorithms the form the unique hardware identifier. In yet other examples, the unique identifier used to determine whether the application can be associated with user account 291 can be based on any other proof of purchase or entitlement that can serve as evidence that the application (i.e., software package) associated with the unique identifier was legally acquired from the software manufacturer. In one instance, the unique identifier can be derived from metadata or attributes associated with the application. In another instance, the unique identifier can be derived from metadata associated with the application, the client device, the user account, other client devices that are associated with the user account, or a combination of one or more of the above.
In one embodiment, the distribution center 210 receives the unique identifier, and processes or analyzes the unique identifier to determine whether the application can be associated with a user account. In certain scenarios, the application cannot be associated with a user account. For example, an application of a device may not be associated with a user account if the application has previously been associated with another user account. As another example, an application may not be able to be associated with a user account if the application is not an authorized copy. This may occur when a user manually copies an application that was originally installed on one device onto another device. As yet another example, the association process can require that a user be logged into the user's account on an electronic device for an application to be linked to a user account.
In another embodiment, the distribution center 210 receives a unique identifier and processes or analyzes the unique identifier to determine whether the application can be associated with a user account. As an example, processing the unique identifier can include verifying the unique identifier by comparing the unique identifier to a database. The database can have a plurality of entries each storing a unique identifier associated with an authorized copy of the application. The result of the comparison can be used to determine an adoption status of the application, such as whether the application is a valid copy, the application is an invalid copy, or whether the application has already been associated with a user account. As another example, processing the unique identifier can include inputting the unique identifier into a hash table to determine the adoption status of the application. In yet another example, the unique identifier can be received as an input to a verification engine, which determines whether this installation of the application is valid and not yet adopted. In yet other examples, other data processing techniques can be applied to the unique identifier to determine whether the application can be associated with a user account. The application can be recently acquired by the user. In other words, the application can have been acquired by the user after purchase and receipt of the electronic device from distribution or manufacturing. Alternatively, the application can be acquired when the electronic device was purchased. Once the adoption status has been determined by the distribution center 210, a confirmation according to the adoption status can be transmitted to the electronic device. The confirmation can be transmitted to inform the electronic device the status of the adoption process. Based on the confirmation, the electronic device can request download of the software package or an update of the software package. In other examples, distribution server 210 can automatically begin the process of downloading the software package or an update of the software package to the electronic device according to the adoption status.
Server side 240 may incorporate a number of servers and tables to determine whether the link request should be authorized. For example, distribution center 210 includes uniqueness server 211 which is configured to process the unique identifier to determine the validity or legitimacy of a link request. Uniqueness server 211 can include a uniqueness table configured to maintain a database or table of electronic devices that have had one or more pre-installed applications linked with a user account. As an example, the uniqueness table can be configured to store the unique hardware identifier of devices that have already linked their pre-installed applications with a user account (i.e., devices that have already adopted the pre-installed applications associated with the device). The uniqueness table can also be configured to store metadata associated with applications that have been associated with a user account. When a device adopts (i.e. links) some or all of its applications with a user account, the device's unique hardware identifier or the unique identifiers of the adopted applications are stored within the uniqueness table. This prevents future requests to link applications that have already been adopted. For example, performing a query on whether a unique identifier is in the uniqueness table determines if the device associated with the unique hardware identifier has already linked its pre-installed applications with a user account. Similarly, the query can also determine if the application associated with the unique identifier has already been linked with a user account. An another example, the uniqueness table can be configured to store the unique hardware identifier of an electronic device along with metadata associated with one or more pre-installed applications of the electronic device that has been previously adopted (i.e., linked with a user account). In other words, the uniqueness table is configured as a one-to-many mapping between a unique hardware identifier of a device and one or more pieces of metadata associated with pre-installed applications of the device that have been selectively adopted. Querying the uniqueness table for a unique hardware identifier can return nothing if the unique hardware identifier does not exist in the uniqueness table and can return metadata associated with pre-installed applications that have been selectively adopted if the unique hardware identifier does exist in the uniqueness table. This can result in the ability to selectively adopt a pre-installed application on a device with a first user account and another pre-installed application on the device with a second user account. In yet other examples, the uniqueness table can be configured to maintain a database or table of applications that have been linked to a user account. Applications that have already been linked can have a unique identifier stored in the uniqueness table, thereby maintaining an up to date database of applications that have been adopted.
In an example, configurations server 230 can verify the validity of the link request by checking the original configuration of the electronic device to verify or determine that a specific application was pre-installed on the electronic device when the device left the manufacturer. The configurations server can also verify or identify applications that the user has a right of ownership, regardless of whether the application has been installed on the user device or associated with the user account. Thus, applications that the user has a right of ownership but has not associated or installed can also be identified. Configurations server 230 includes a database that stores the original configuration of electronic devices created by the manufacturer. The original configuration can include the version of the operating system and the version of the applications, if any, that were delivered with the electronic device. For instance, a user ordering an electronic device through an online store can configure the device with one or more applications at time of purchase. The applications are installed on the electronic device by manufacturing based on the configuration at time of purchase. Manufacturing communicates the configuration of the electronic device to the configurations server 230 for subsequent look up. When configurations server 230 receives a look up request containing a unique hardware identifier from an electronic device, configurations server 230 performs a search or query on the database and returns the version of the operating system installed on the device and/or a list containing the version of applications that were installed on the electronic device. Configurations server 230 can compare the list of installed applications with the application the user is attempting to associate with the user account to determine whether the application the user is attempting to associate is an authorized install or has been previously associated with another user account. Alternatively, configurations server 230 can pass the list of pre-installed applications to distribution center 210 to determine whether the link request should be granted. This check can prevent users from attempting to circumvent distribution system 200 by copying pre-installed applications from one device to another.
Once one or more elements of server side 240 validate the link request, the pre-installed application is associated with the user account (i.e., application adoption). Moreover, uniqueness server 211 or configurations server 230 can be updated to take into account the application adoption. For example, a new entry can be added into the uniqueness table of uniqueness server 211 since some or all of the pre-installed applications associated with the electronic device have been adopted. In some examples, distribution center 210 can transmit an update of the pre-installed application to computing device 260 after the pre-installed application is associated with the user account. In other examples, distribution center 210 can transmit the pre-installed application to other devices associated with the user account, such as computing device 270, even though computing device 270 was not originally configured with the pre-installed application. Through similar requests for application adoption, pre-installed applications of computing device 270 stored in applications 271 and pre-installed applications of portable device 280 stored in applications 281 can be associated with user account 291 and ultimately distributed to computing device 260, computing device 270, and/or portable device 280.
One type of page request is an updates page request 301. Updates page request 301 can be a request transmitted to server 360 to perform a query for available application updates. In response to updates page request 301, server 360 can return HyperText Markup Language (“HTML”) page 303 configured to inform the user of applications stored in client device 350 that have an update available. In some examples, server 360 can return metadata to client device 350, which in turn generates the HTML page to present to the user. Updates page request 301 can include a digital receipt for each application stored in client device 350. The receipt contains metadata related to the application for documenting a purchase or ownership of the software. One type of receipt is a real receipt, which are associated with purchased applications or applications that have been adopted. The real receipt can include a description of the application, the version number of the application, when the application was purchased, information relating to who purchased the application, information relating to the device that the application was initially installed on, and others. In other words, the real receipt is a proof of purchase that is unique to the purchaser and/or the electronic device that the application was purchased on. Another type of receipt is a stub receipt. Stub receipts contain a subset of the information in real receipts and are part of application when the application has not been adopted with a user account. In one example, a stub receipt uniquely identifies this copy of the application from other copies. This can allow the server to determine whether this particular copy of the application (which may be gifted to the user or otherwise acquired by the user) can be adopted by the user. In another example, stub receipts are generated by the manufacturer as receipts to be associated with pre-installed applications. In order to expedite and simplify the installation of applications by the manufacturer, the stub receipts can include a minimal amount of information which is less than in real receipts. For example, the stub receipts can include an application identifier that identifies the application to the server and also a version number that identifies the version of the application. The application identifier can be a name associated with the application. The stub receipt may not include information specific to the purchaser such as when the application was purchased and information relating to who purchased the application or what device the pre-installed application was installed on. In other words, the stub receipt may not contain user accounts, user account information, or information relating to the client device, computing device, or other device. The application identifier can be a name associated with the pre-installed application. In some examples, stub receipts are generated by the manufacturer when the applications are being pre-installed on the device or the device is being prepared for delivery. In other examples, the stub receipts can be generated by server 260 and subsequently transmitted to client device 350 to be associated with a pre-installed application. Server 360 can generate the stub receipts in response to a request by client device 350 or periodically scheduled communications between server 360 and client device 350. Once a pre-installed application is adopted, the stub receipt can be replaced with a real receipt. In another example, the stub receipt is generated as a receipt to be associated with a purchased, gifted, or otherwise acquired application that was not associated with a client device when the application was acquired. This stub receipt can be generated by the manufacturer, application distributor, online store, or other. In some cases, the stub receipts can be batch processed and assigned to applications for distribution. The stub receipts are saved on the server and used to authenticate adoption requests. As in the previous example, the stub receipt can be replaced with a real receipt during the application adoption process. The real receipt can be generated by client device 350, server 360, or other element in client-server system 300.
In this example, updates page request 301 includes stub receipt A 311 associated with pre-installed application 310, stub receipt B 321 associated with pre-installed application 320, and real receipt 331 associated with application 330. Application 330 was purchased from server 360 after the purchase of client device 350 and thus includes a real receipt. In response to updates page request 301, server 360 generates HTML 303 that informs the user if pre-installed application 310, pre-installed application 320, or application 330 have an update available that can be downloaded from server 360. An available update associated with a pre-installed application that has not been adopted (i.e., linked or associated with a user account) cannot be downloaded until the pre-installed application has been adopted to the user account. Once the available update is downloaded and installed on client device 350, the stub receipt can be replaced with a real receipt that includes other metadata such as when the application was purchased (i.e., date that the available update was installed), the user that purchased it, and the electronic device that the application was initially installed on.
Another type of page request is purchases page request 302. Purchases page request 302 can be transmitted to server 360 to request a list of applications that have been purchased by the user of client device 350. In response to the request, Server 360 can return HTML page 303 configured to inform the user of applications that have been purchased by the user of client device 350 and optionally the applications that have been installed in client device 350. Purchased applications not stored in client device 350 can be downloaded and installed. HTML page 303 can also include applications that are available for adoption (i.e., linking or associating with a user account). Applications on the client device that have not been associated with a user account can be selected for adoption through updates page request 301 or alternatively purchases page request 302. The unadopted applications can transmit receipts or other forms of proof of entitlement in a request to install the application or a desired application on the client device.
Purchases page request 302 can include manifest 340. Manifest 340 can be configured to store information associated with pre-installed applications or applications otherwise acquired. This information can be used by server 360 to inform the user of applications that are available for adoption. Manifest 340 includes a list, table, or other data structure configured to store the version number of applications in client device 350. The version number of the application can be found in a stub receipt or other metadata associated with the application. In one example, manifest 340 is generated the first time client device 350 starts up. For example, the manifest can be generated during the first boot of a client device by utilizing a spotlight (i.e., search) function on the client device to search the computer for stub receipts, which are subsequently used to generate the manifest. The manifest can be stored in a configurations server to be accessed during linking of an application with a user account or during recovery mode of the electronic device as will be discussed below.
In this example, client device 350 is queried to locate stub receipt 311 and stub receipt 321, which are subsequently used to generate manifest 340. During reformat or recovery of client device 350, both pre-installed and otherwise acquired applications can be deleted from the client device 350. Applications that have been linked with a user account can be re-downloaded to client device 350. However, pre-installed applications that have not been linked with a user account risk being lost completely. Manifest 340 serves as a mechanism to prevent loss of applications that have not been adopted as will be described in further detail below. An application available for adoption cannot be downloaded until the pre-installed application has been linked or associated with the user account. Once the available update is downloaded and installed on client device 350, manifest 340 can be edited to remove the stub receipt associated with the presently adopted application. Furthermore, the installed application contains a real receipt. In some examples, the generation of updates page request 301 and purchases page request 302 along with the processing and retrieval of HTML page 303 are managed and handled by an application management program (not shown) installed in client device 350. The application management program can be proprietary to the manufacturer and be configured to specifically communicate with servers belonging to the manufacturer.
Client-Server system 300 can also adopt applications that are acquired by client device 350 but not associated with a user account (e.g., gifted, purchased but not linked to a user account, or distributed to the client device through other means). As an example, an acquired application can be linked with a user account through an updates page request, purchases page request, or other page request. The request can include a stub receipt or metadata associated with or derived from the stub receipt. As another example, manifest 340 can be updated when unadopted applications (i.e., applications not yet linked with a user account) are acquired by client device 350.
For example, the client device can periodically communicate with the server and retrieve the most up to date version number of stored applications that have an update available. In this example, updates link 451 has been selected and one application that includes an available update is presented within HTML page 450. The one application is presented with an application description 457 describing the application. Application description 457 can include the name of the application, the author of the application, the version number of the application, the release date of the application, or other information associated with the application. Application description 457 can further include icon 455 that provides an identity to the application and synopsis 459 of the changes that were implemented in this updated version of the application. This can provide information to the user so that the use can make an informed decision on whether he or she wishes to upgrade. HTML page 450 also includes selectable link 461 that can be selected by the user if he or she wishes to receive the application update. The number of available updates is displayed at headline 453. Headline 453 is configured to provide another convenient location where the use can quickly determine the number of updates that are available. In some example, HTML page 450 can also include a selectable link next to headline 453 for updating all applications that have an update available.
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The server receives the transmitted application information (i.e., manifest, receipts, user account, and other user account information) and generates one or more lists of applications based upon the received information (507). The applications lists and the process used to generate the applications lists can vary depending upon the information received. A first applications list can include applications that are installed on the electronic device of the client. A second applications list can include applications that are associated with the user account and can be installed on the electronic device of the client. A third applications list can include applications that can possibly be linked with a user account. The applications in the third list can include applications that were pre-installed on the electronic device of the client and/or applications that the client has a right of ownership but has not adopted or installed. Other application lists can also be generated such as purchased or otherwise acquired applications that have not been associated with a user account. Depending upon the application information received by the server, one or more of the application lists described above can be generated. In some examples, the generation of the applications lists can involve accessing an applications database such as applications database 220 in
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Method 600 can generate a unique hardware identifier (620). The unique hardware identifier can serve as a digital receipt of valid ownership or entitlement of the application. The unique hardware identifier can be generated from combining one or more identifiers specific to the electronic device. For instance, the unique hardware identifier can be based upon one or more identifiers associated with the hardware components of the electronic device. Since the identifiers of the hardware components are unique, no two unique hardware identifiers are the same. As an example, the unique hardware identifier can be generated by combining the logic board serial number of the device with the Ethernet hardware address of the device. The logic board serial number and the Ethernet hardware address can be combined using concatenation, hashing, an encoding scheme, or other data manipulation algorithm. The unique hardware identifier can be transmitted from the client to the server as part of a request to associate a pre-installed application with a user account (630). In other examples where the pre-installed applications can be selectively adopted, metadata associated with the pre-installed application is also transmitted from the client to the server. The metadata provides details to the server allowing the server to identify the selected pre-installed application which the user is attempting to adopt into the user account. After the server receives the unique hardware identifier and optionally the metadata, the server can verify the proof of entitlement by determining if the pre-installed application has already been linked with a user account (640). The server can determine whether the application has already been linked by checking the uniqueness table for the unique hardware identifier. Since the uniqueness table stores entries containing the unique hardware identifier of electronic devices that have already adopted pre-installed applications, a unique hardware identifier that is not found in the table signifies that the electronic device has not yet associated any of its pre-installed applications. If method 600 allows for selective adoption of pre-installed applications, then the determination can include querying the uniqueness table for an entry associated with the unique hardware identifier. If the unique hardware identifier is found, the determination can evaluate the entry with the metadata of the pre-installed application to determine if the selected pre-installed application has previously been adopted.
If it is determined from searching (i.e., querying) the uniqueness table that the application has previously been adopted, then an error is transmitted back to the client (641). The client receives the error and presents a warning to the user that the application has already been adopted (642).
If it is determined that the application the user wishes to adopt is not part of the original configuration of the electronic device, an error message can be transmitted to the client (651). Once the client receives the error message, the client can present a warning to the user that the electronic device is not eligible for adoption (642).
Method 600 can also be configured for adoption of a post-installed application (i.e., an application installed by the user). Post-installed applications include gifted, purchased, redeemed, or otherwise acquired applications that have been installed on the user's device after the device has left the manufacturer or after the device has been purchased by the user. For example, method 600 can generate a unique identifier associated with an application instead of generating the unique hardware identifier (620). The unique identifier can be metadata associated with the application that is used to show proof of entitlement or proof of purchase of the application. The unique identifier can be stored in metadata of the application and subsequently retrieved by the client device. Alternatively, the unique identifier can be generated based on metadata of the application. For example, the unique identifier can be derived from a unique or non-unique receipt of the application, metadata related to the receiving the application such as the date and/or location that the application was acquired, a unique identifier associated with the client device, and/or other metadata associated with either the application or the client device.
In some examples, the communication protocol can depend on whether the unique identifier is associated with a pre-installed application (i.e., an application installed by the manufacturer) or a post-installed application (i.e., an application installed by the user). For instance, the communication protocol can skip confirming that the application is part of the original configuration of the electronic device (650) when the unique identifier received from the client is associated with an application that was post-installed and therefore, not part of the original configuration of the electronic device. Instead, the server can verify the proof of entitlement or ownership of the application by comparing the unique identifier with a database of valid unique identifiers. This can allow the server to distinguish and differentiate between valid and invalid copies of the application. Once the proof of entitlement is verified, the application is adopted as part of the user account. To determine whether an application is pre-installed or post-installed, the server can analyze a flag or other metadata associated with the unique identifier.
In yet other examples, the communication protocol can depend on whether the unique identifier received from the client is based on metadata associated with the client electronic device. For instance, the database or table accessed by the server to determine whether the application has already been linked can depend on the unique identifier. A first database can be accessed and updated by the server for unique identifiers associated with the client electronic device. The first database can be keyed and searchable based on hardware of the electronic device. A second database can be accessed and updated by the server for unique identifiers not associated with a client device. In other words, these unique identifiers are based solely on the proof of entitlement associated with the application and thus, searching the second database would be based on proof of entitlement or some variation of the proof of entitlement.
Process 800 can begin by entering recovery mode (820). Entering recover mode can trigger the download of a basic operating system from the manufacturer. The basic operating system can be configured to generate a unique hardware identifier (830). The unique hardware identifier can be generated using one of the methods described above. Once the unique hardware identifier is generated, the basic operating system can transmit the unique hardware identifier to a configurations server (840). Based upon the received unique hardware identifier, the configurations server can return a manifest that includes the applications that were pre-installed on the electronic device and the version number of those applications. The manifest can also include other applications which the owner of the electronic device has a right of ownership. In some examples, the communications server may communicate with the distribution server to determine whether the electronic device has already adopted the applications. If the unique hardware identifier is found in the uniqueness table of the distribution center, then one or more of the pre-installed applications of the electronic device has already been adopted. Thus, communications server may return an empty manifest or a manifest that does not include the specific pre-installed applications that have already been adopted. This may minimize the occurrences where a purchases page request presents pre-installed applications to the user for adoption when the pre-installed applications have already been adopted. In other examples where the distribution center stores a local copy of the configurations database, the unique hardware identifier can be transmitted to the distribution center rather than the configurations server. Using the unique hardware identifier, the distribution center can determine the pre-installed applications and of those applications, the ones that have already been associated with a user account.
The configurations server (or the distribution center) can return the version number of the operating system that came with the electronic device and a manifest that is based upon the pre-installed applications of the electronic device (850). In other examples, the manifest can also include post-installed applications of electronic device (850) that have not been linked with a user account. The manifest stored on the configurations server can be periodically updated when an electronic device installs an application that has not been associated with a user account. This can occur for a variety reasons, such as network failure, server failure, or a user selected option to not associate the application with the user account at this point in time. The version number of the operating system is transmitted to an operating systems server (860), which in turn transmits the original operating system to the electronic device. The electronic device receives the original operating system (870) and optionally, installs the original operating system. The electronic device now includes a fresh copy of the original operating system and a manifest based upon the pre-installed applications of the electronic device. If the user has not associated the pre-installed applications with a user account, the user can do so by selecting the purchases page link as described above.
Embodiments within the scope of the present disclosure may also include tangible and/or non-transitory computer-readable storage media for carrying or having computer-executable instructions or data structures stored thereon. Such non-transitory computer-readable storage media can be any available media that can be accessed by a general purpose or special purpose computer, including the functional design of any special purpose processor as discussed above. By way of example, and not limitation, such non-transitory computer-readable media can include RAM, ROM, EEPROM, CD-ROM or other optical disk storage, magnetic disk storage or other magnetic storage devices, or any other medium which can be used to carry or store desired program code means in the form of computer-executable instructions, data structures, or processor chip design. When information is transferred or provided over a network or another communications connection (either hardwired, wireless, or combination thereof) to a computer, the computer properly views the connection as a computer-readable medium. Thus, any such connection is properly termed a computer-readable medium. Combinations of the above should also be included within the scope of the computer-readable media.
Computer-executable instructions include, for example, instructions and data which cause a general purpose computer, special purpose computer, or special purpose processing device to perform a certain function or group of functions. Computer-executable instructions also include program modules that are executed by computers in stand-alone or network environments. Generally, program modules include routines, programs, components, data structures, objects, and the functions inherent in the design of special-purpose processors, etc. that perform particular tasks or implement particular abstract data types. Computer-executable instructions, associated data structures, and program modules represent examples of the program code means for executing steps of the methods disclosed herein. The particular sequence of such executable instructions or associated data structures represents examples of corresponding acts for implementing the functions described in such steps.
Those of skill in the art will appreciate that other embodiments of the disclosure may be practiced in network computing environments with many types of computer system configurations, including personal computers, hand-held devices, multi-processor systems, microprocessor-based or programmable consumer electronics, network PCs, minicomputers, mainframe computers, and the like. Embodiments may also be practiced in distributed computing environments where tasks are performed by local and remote processing devices that are linked (either by hardwired links, wireless links, or by a combination thereof) through a communications network. In a distributed computing environment, program modules may be located in both local and remote memory storage devices.
The various embodiments described above are provided by way of illustration only and should not be construed to limit the scope of the disclosure. Those skilled in the art will readily recognize various modifications and changes that may be made to the principles described herein without following the example embodiments and applications illustrated and described herein, and without departing from the spirit and scope of the disclosure.
This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/181,424, filed on Jul. 12, 2011, entitled, SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR LINKING PRE-INSTALLED SOFTWARE TO A USER ACCOUNT ON AN ONLINE STORE; this application is also a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/248,942, filed on Sep. 29, 2011, entitled, SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR LINKING PRE-INSTALLED SOFTWARE TO A USER ACCOUNT ON AN ONLINE STORE; and this application also claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 61/596,928, filed on Feb. 9, 2012, entitled, SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR LINKING PRE-INSTALLED SOFTWARE TO A USER ACCOUNT ON AN ONLINE STORE; all of which are hereby incorporated by reference herein in their entireties.
Number | Date | Country | |
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61596928 | Feb 2012 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13181424 | Jul 2011 | US |
Child | 13436609 | US | |
Parent | 13248942 | Sep 2011 | US |
Child | 13181424 | US |