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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 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 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
Okta CEO ‘paranoid’ as vibe coders stir SaaS-pocalypse fears
O'Ryan Johnson O'Ryan Johnson · 2026-03-06 · via The Register - Off-Prem: SaaS

SaaS

It’s ok, Todd. You’re only paranoid if you’re wrong.

Okta chairman and CEO Todd McKinnon said he believes it would be difficult for an LLM alone to replicate the quality of SaaS applications his company provides, but that doesn’t stop him from worrying about competition from bots.

“We are paranoid. And we're making sure that we are using all the latest technologies: LLMs, coding tools to make sure we have not only something that's resilient and secure but has the best features and the best capabilities,” he told investors during a fourth quarter earnings call on Wednesday. “And so we're making sure that we build things internally as fast as anyone could build them because we – make no mistakes, the prize here that the whole industry is going after, which is this agentic future where digital labor is part of the TAM is a massive prize.”

McKinnon joins many wary investors who are likewise taking a second look at the soundness of the software market with the broadening use and capabilities of AI coding tools such as Anthropic’s Claude Code. Those fears have given rise to the so-called SaaSpocalypse, which has taken billions in value from technology bellwether stocks with Microsoft, Oracle, SAP, Salesforce and others all down double digit percentages over the last six months.

"I think if you want to build what any SaaS company has done or what Okta has done," he said. "it's years and years of hardening and making sure there's no vulnerabilities and making sure it scales and it's reliable."

The stakes are high for Okta as it sees identity access as key to the general adoption and proliferation of AI agents throughout the technology industry. Okta’s 20,000 customers are using its identity access tools to enable agents to work in sensitive areas of their organizations.

McKinnon said Okta has two billing models for agents, one which charges per number of agents used by an individual human, and another that charges by the number of connections the agent has into systems.

During the call, McKinnon said that demand for its new products Auth0 for AI Agents and Okta for AI Agents is surging, while total sales of its new product lineup Okta Identity Governance, Okta Privileged Access, Identity Security Posture Management, Identity Threat Protection, Okta Device Access, and Fine-Grained Authorization represented approximately 30% of Q4 bookings.

While the total addressable market for identity access today is about $20 billion, he sees that market growing to up to $80 billion as the industry competes for the future of digital labor.

“I mean this could be bigger than – this could be the biggest part of cyber in a few years for sure. And it could be even bigger than that if you really think about the infrastructure that stitches together the entire agentic enterprise and is the plumbing that makes it run,” he told analysts on the call. “So we're investing and we're paranoid and we're working hard to make sure we capture that.”

Late last year, Okta's president of Auth0, Shiv Ramji, told The Register that anxiety in the enterprise over AI agents running amok has thus far halted the wide deployment of these digital workhorses, while Okta’s products were key to mitigating that fear.

"It is security, privacy concerns like, OK are these systems ready? Do we have the right measures and visibility in place," he said. "Which is kind of the insight that led us to really accelerate and build these products and get to market faster, because we realized that our customers need us to help them."

Okta’s total revenue for the fiscal year ended January 31 was $2.9 billion, up 12 percent, with net income of $235 million. The company expects growth of nine percent in the next fiscal year. The company's stock price jumped 11% on Thursday after the earnings report as investors cheered numbers that were better than Wall Street analysts expected. ®