Nothing screams TRUE SOCIALIST like:
-A millionaire who owns 3 homes
-Arriving in a huge SUV
-To his private jet
-To fly out and give a paid speech
-On the evils of capitalism and fossil fuels
Am I right?
Are we quietly reaching peak subscription fatigue? 🤔
For the last decade, SaaS has been the absolute default. We're used to the narrative that renting our software is the only way to stay agile, get updates, and remain competitive.
But lately, I'm noticing a shift in how teams are evaluating their tech stacks. People are starting to ask a very basic, fundamental question: What if we actually owned our tools again?
Stepping away from the traditional SaaS model and returning to self-hosted or perpetual licenses changes the dynamic in two major ways:
1. You own the tool.
No unexpected monthly price hikes. No sudden deprecation of the features your workflow relies on. You control the environment and you decide when it updates.
2. You own the data.
Your data lives exactly where you want it to live. It isn’t locked inside a third-party ecosystem, sitting on a rented server, or quietly being used to train external models.
There is absolutely a time and a place for SaaS—it's incredibly convenient for many things. But for mission-critical workflows, the peace of mind that comes with absolute sovereignty over your infrastructure and your information is hard to beat.
I’m curious to hear from others who manage tech stacks or data. Where do you draw the line? Are there certain tools or datasets you prefer to keep entirely in-house?
Let's discuss below! 👇
#TechTrends #DataSovereignty #SoftwareArchitecture #DataPrivacy #TechLeadership
@SenatorBaldwin Stop being a crybaby, it makes you look like whiny child. Grow up and stop lying. Gas was higher under Biden even with this legal war..