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What is eligible?

In general, Technopedia customers can see or request to capture software products from various categories and sources in Technopedia. There are only a handful of items that Technopedia will not capture unless there are valid reasons otherwise (subject to the discretion of Flexera).

Some examples of reasons that otherwise ineligible software would be included:

  • Defined lifecycle dates
  • Published support policy
  • License management implications
  • Software vulnerability implications
  • Typical deployment on a machine separate from where its core product is deployed

Any significant changes to these criteria will be communicated in advance using the Content Notification process.

What is ineligible?

The following is the list of items that Technopedia generally avoids collecting unless they have defined lifecycle dates, a published support policy, license management implications, software vulnerability implications, or deployment on a different machine than their core product. Exceptions may be made at Flexera’s discretion, particularly if the software has identifying discoverable evidence.

  • Service packs including language packs, security packs, compatibility packs, hotfixes, patches, update sets, and knowledge base components – however, the specific case of service packs (not hotfixes, etc.) for operating systems IS eligible.
  • Software Development Kits (SDK), Toolkits, API add-ins, plug-ins, JAR files, libraries, extensions, and other miscellaneous extras and options
  • Software products that are not listed in their manufacturer's official references, including software titles used as internal/unofficial references
  • Helper and documentation applications (including installers/uninstallers, setup files, help files, help applications, wizards, MSI installers, etc.)
  • Portlets, servlets, applets, Java web-starts (JavaWS), and most Java-related components such as Java applets and scripts with extensions .java, .jar, .js, .jsp, .json
  • Websites, web pages, and any other web interfaces that simply serve as a front end to a service. However, Technopedia does capture software as a service (SaaS) products, including client applications of cloud-based software offerings. Specifically, for SaaS, there are distinctive criteria that set them apart from simple websites/web pages, such as:
    • The application and data are hosted externally, where patches and upgrades are deployed transparently
    • Frequently accessible via custom-built apps installed on Internet-connected devices such as desktops, mobile phones
    • Data is stored in a cloud/cloud-like infrastructure
    • Multitenancy, where the application layer and sometimes the application itself are different for each tenant
  • Hardware drivers and/or hardware-specific firmware unless they represent operating systems
  • Software features or capabilities that are marketed as part of the main software title unless they are independently discoverable or have additional licensing requirements
  • Mobile applications, unless they are independently discoverable or are associated with a SaaS product
  • Customer internally developed software applications
  • Database backup files, code, and example scripts
  • Open source software captured in the nexB DejaCode catalog https://enterprise.dejacode.com/home/ IS eligible even if the above criteria are not met.
  • Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS) virtualized/containerized solutions that can be deployed either on public cloud instances (Amazon, Azure, etc.) or private cloud (VMWare, OpenStack, etc.) are not eligible for our regular software capture in Technopedia.
  • Hardware devices are not eligible for inclusion in the software catalog, except for a few security-related virtual technologies (for example, firewalls, vulnerability shield servers, intrusion prevention devices, etc.).
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Last update:
‎Jul 17, 2024 02:10 PM
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