From ee70ebfb10eaba18de2fc2fd695496c9b6d571fc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jens Langhammer Date: Thu, 26 Jan 2023 00:34:10 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] website/blog: fix typo Signed-off-by: Jens Langhammer --- website/blog/2023-01-24-saas-should-not-be-the-default/item.md | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/website/blog/2023-01-24-saas-should-not-be-the-default/item.md b/website/blog/2023-01-24-saas-should-not-be-the-default/item.md index 3d00321f5..48b98a7e0 100644 --- a/website/blog/2023-01-24-saas-should-not-be-the-default/item.md +++ b/website/blog/2023-01-24-saas-should-not-be-the-default/item.md @@ -108,7 +108,7 @@ That said, there are also compelling reasons to use self-hosted products. For ex - Shift financing from opex to capex, which often results in net cost savings. - Trust in shared alignment. If you own and self-host a product, you’re incentivized, in a way even the best SaaS vendor isn’t, to keep it secure. -Authentication, what we specialize in here at Authentik, is a great example. The industry standard used to be a self-hosted products – most commonly Microsoft ADFS – but they were it was notoriously unwieldy, which gave companies like Auth0 and Okta a chance to take over the market. +Authentication, what we specialize in here at Authentik, is a great example. The industry standard used to be a self-hosted products – most commonly Microsoft ADFS – but they were notoriously unwieldy, which gave companies like Auth0 and Okta a chance to take over the market. The technology industry is cyclical, however, and our bet is that by applying lessons learned from SaaS, vendors can offer self-hosted products that are as good or better than SaaS products. Customers can then have their cake and eat it too.