Friday, 2 October 2009

SaaS as a software protection strategy

02 October 2009

Source: http://www.extranetevolution.com/extranet_evolution/

Reading WorldCAD Access and The CAD Industry blogs this morning, I learned about the latest developments in a court case brought by Autodesk to stop an eBay trader, Tim Vernor, from selling second-hand CAD software. Ignoring the complex issues relating to copyright, it occurred to me that other software vendors are already side-stepping such issues by delivering their software as a service.

Instead of distributing disks or enabling software downloads to users' local machines, hosting the application 'in the cloud' and allowing users to access the solution and its related data via the internet effectively prevents any end-user from gaining access to the underlying software code. This wasn't a vendor benefit that I had previously identified as inherent to the SaaS model, but alongside the other advantages of SaaS - faster development and testing, easier deployment, quicker upgrades or patching, economies of scale, more efficient support, etc - perhaps protection of the vendor's intellectual property should also be another reason to embrace the SaaS approach.

2 comments:

Elizabeth Coker said...

One other additional benefit of the SaaS model is that you can incorporate real-time contextual data about who the user is, what device they are one and where they are. This allows for a more relevant, personalized experience for each user. This becomes even more valuable for mobile SaaS users where the content needs to be specific & relevant to fit into a tiny screen.

Syazli Fathi said...

Thanks for the input Eli. Are you currently doing any specific research on this?

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