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by NotASithLord 2426 days ago
"If you rent a server (real or virtual), whose software load you have control over, that's not SaaSS. In SaaSS, someone else decides what software runs on the server and therefore controls the computing it does for you. In the case where you install the software on the server, you control what computing it does for you. Thus, the rented server is virtually your computer. For this issue, it counts as yours."

I'm most curious about applying this distinction to the computing environment today. According to the author it seems Amazon EC2 wouldn't be considered a SaaSS, but Amazon Serverless would? After all you don't control the software loaded in a "serverless" environment, only the business logic. Yet both are hosted in and maintained by Amazon. Amazon, for all intents and purposes, has access to the data coming in and out of there in both cases. So does the distinction hold true, and if it does does it not damage the value of making such a distinction?