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The Register - Off-Prem: SaaS

Snowflake to burn $6B on AWS Graviton CPUs and AI accelerators Google Cloud suspended major customer Railway.com without cause, causing outage Anthropic comes for the midmarket software spend ServiceNow under siege as Atlassian adds to ITSM take-outs Survey: US workers are not keen on Microsoft's AI Service change takes down Microsoft Outlook for iOS Workday, Rippling, Slack lflunk data access test: Fivetran UK tribunal sends £2B claim accusing Microsoft of overcharging for licensing to trial The spaghettified DBMS chart that shows Oracle's crown is slowly slipping Atlassian’s new data collection policy protects rich customers while AI eats the rest Atlassian to train AI on user data unless law or cash say no McGraw Hill linked to 13.5M-record data leak UK told its Big Tech habit is now a national security risk How ServiceNow gets customers to gorge at the AI trough Salesforce is taking on ServiceNow in ITSM. The winner is AI Salesforce is taking on ServiceNow in ITSM. The winner is AI Snowflake manager on 'Spider-Man' theory of AI agents Minnesota payroll problems grew after Workday, say auditors Salesforce looks to Slackbot to help solve SaaSpocalypse ServiceNow salesman sues employer in commission dispute ServiceNow salesman sues employer in commission dispute Big Tech has not enforced Australia’s social media ban 'Emphathetic 'Salesforce bots to help fired via Labor Dept Datadog bets DIY AI will mean it dodges the SaaSpocalypse Snowflake's ongoing pitch: bring AI to data, not vice versa CMA dithers as Microsoft's cloud meter runs on your dime Salesforce acquihires team behind Clockwise for Agentforce CMA cracks knuckles, eyes Adobe's cancellation fees SAP's grand cloud escape plan €2B short of the runway Microsoft 365 pauses Copilot creep after admins cry foul Salesforce buyback to saddle company with debt until 2066 India tests whether AI can stop trains hitting elephants Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen to step down after 18 years Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen to step down after 18 years Pentagon praises Palantir tech for battlefield strike speed Atlassian to shed ten percent of staff, because AI Atlassian's new Jira migration tool slowed down cloudy moves Oracle says AI coding is helping it dodge SaaSpocalypse Vendors building tools to clean up messes made by AI agents Iran is the first out-loud cyberwar the US has fought Microsoft postpones new Outlook migration to 2027 Okta CEO ‘paranoid’ as vibe coders stir SaaS-pocalypse fears Capita £370M Whitehall outsourcing deal challenged in court Claude having artificially intelligent hiccups and access lockouts for over two hours Claude outage hits chat, API, vibe coding SaaS-pocalypse isn't coming any time soon Half of German-speaking SAP users to stay on ECC to 2030 Half of German-speaking SAP users to stay on ECC to 2030 Salesforce CEO declared victory over flagging software sales Workday CEO's AI talk can't shake off weaker sales forecast Microsoft teases ‘reimagined SharePoint’ with added AI Palantir spent $25M on CEO flights for chatty Karp Microsoft throws spox under the bus in ICC email flap ServiceNow buys Pyramid Analytics ServiceNow buys Pyramid Analytics Supply chain breaches fuel cybercrime cycle, report says Apple inserts ads for its premium productivity services Apple inserts ads for its premium productivity services Workday CEO steps down amid layoffs and market jitters Workday CEO steps down amid layoffs and market jitters Counting the waves of tech industry BS from blockchain to AI Atlassian swears it can deliver AI without blowing out costs Workday layoffs to hit about 400 jobs Rise of AI means companies could pass on SaaS Estonia tests Euro alternatives amid Microsoft rollout MEP: 'The EU runs on Microsoft', Uncle Sam could turn it off Azure outages ripple across multiple dependent services Europe shrugs off tariffs, plots to end tech reliance on US Microsoft ends some standalone SharePoint and OneDrive plans TikTok’s US joint venture off to a rocky start Oracle, Michael Dell, invest in JV to run TikTok USA Mandiant plugs Salesforce leaks with open source tool Data storage cloud Snowflake buys ITOM platform Observe ServiceNow snags Microsoft vet to run legal amid M&A spree ServiceNow to buy Armis in $7.7 billion security deal ServiceNow unworried by Salesforce targeting its ITSM core ServiceNow mulls Armis buy to gain IT visibility Workday project at Washington University hits $266M Here we go again: Microsoft in UK court over cloud licensing
SaaS-pocalypse isn't coming any time soon
Lindsay Clark Lindsay Clark · 2026-03-01 · via The Register - Off-Prem: SaaS

SaaS

SaaS-pocalypse chatter is doomster pr0n. It would be nice if enterprise IT were boring again

Lost among the investor froth, someone has to do all the boring stuff. And they'll probably be around for the next spin of the hype cycle

OPINION Say goodbye to the SaaS-pocalypse theory, which posits that advances in AI will bring the software-as-a-service market to its knees. Say hello to "a feedback loop with no natural brake." Or doomster porn, as others would have it.

At the beginning of this week, we woke up to a world where a single tech-related post could shake the US stock market and wipe billions of dollars off the value of favorites such as DoorDash and Uber.

According to the UK's Guardian newspaper, Citrini Research is a little-known US firm that provides insights on "transformative megatrends."

Nonetheless, the firm's blog post showed that it could have a big impact by jumping on the SaaS-pocalypse bandwagon and setting off some firecrackers.

Loosely, it imagines that the impact of LLM-based AI on the market for SaaS is such that by June 2028, US unemployment will hit 10 percent. Former Salesforce staffers will have to work as Uber drivers. Incumbent application providers will be forced to slash prices.

"SaaS wasn't 'dead,'" points out a fictional commentator from 2028 in the post. "There was still a cost-benefit analysis to running and supporting in-house builds. But in-house was an option, and that factored into pricing negotiations. Perhaps more importantly, the competitive landscape had changed. AI had made it easier to develop and ship new features, so differentiation collapsed. Incumbents were in a race to the bottom on pricing – a knife-fight with both each other and with the new crop of upstart challengers that popped up,"

More sage commentators were on hand to pour cold water on the wild speculation. Former FT journalist and Evercore ISI analyst Krishna Guha wrote: "Even if the tech and microeconomics were to evolve in line with this scenario, it is highly unlikely that the macro would, as this would require a set of extreme and improbable conditions to hold."

The CEO of cloud-based data warehouse and platform company Snowflake was also on hand to add a bit of sobriety to the SaaS-pocalypse party.

Sridhar Ramaswamy said: "It's useful to step back and look at the impact that AI as a whole is having on software. We spend a lot of time looking at this. We live this – and our take is that overall, the winners are going to be the companies that provide that single source of enterprise truth. No AI model is going to help you if there are four sources of the truth. Similarly, having built-in security, auditability, trust or even governance over access, who can access what data set is critical."

Speaking to investors, Ramaswamy's take was bound to be a bit self-serving. Snowflake wants its platform to be that single source of truth. But he has a point. It is not just the cost of building software that prevents newcomers from taking chunks out of the enterprise software market; it is inertia.

Oracle, Salesforce, and SAP have such an advantage because user data is already in these systems and users are habituated to their processes. Oracle and SAP still have a heavy on-prem footprint, but they are slowly but surely converting customers to SaaS, whether customers want to go there or not. Sure, automation will cut costs, but all the SaaS vendors are already building that automation into their stacks. Gartner says that, at least in the short to medium term, users will be happy to deploy AI agents from the application environment they already have.

It's true that SaaS-only companies may be overvalued. The growth trajectory they have enjoyed in the last decade or so will be unsustainable simply through the law of large numbers. More vendors are entering the market and on-prem vendors are converting customers to SaaS. But businesses and public sector organizations are notoriously slow-moving and risk-averse when it comes to their transactional applications. They need to have the people to make sure it works and that the data is coherent, well-governed, and mostly accurate. It might be boring, but it's true. And for now, boring might be the best way to be. ®