Your problem (access controls for the purpose of enforcing a software license) is similar to that of security/encryption in general. But the number one rule is: never roll your own crypto. I think that definitely applies here.
Consider how easy it is to defeat all of the identity mechanisms you might find. Then consider how easy it is to patch the binary to not execute the comparison that would drive it to execute the "your software is unlicensed" code. Now consider how easy it is to download a patch which does that for everyone in the world.
Now try to balance your desire to thwart the users who can't figure that out against the impact on your legitimate users who will find your software to be "broken" when they replace their failing hard disk (built with flood zone parts, e.g. :). How will your software react when you're on a platform with no NIC or disks (totally feasible, your software may last ages longer than any hardware API you use). Will it fail safe/paranoid, or fail compliant/trusting? Are you sure you really want to go ahead with this scheme?
If you indeed need a license mechanism, consider an algorithm to produce license identification strings instead.