Q: Clarification Deal Terms Possible, please?

Apologies if the answer is hidden somewhere, I just can't find clear definitions of the terms used in the offer description.
The use cases sound highly interesting, but it is unnecessarily difficult to understand the terms of the offer.

The AppSumo offers are equivalent to the Professional Plans on the homepage?

What is an "application" in TU Latch terms? Is that similar to a single plugin in WP? Or is that like per WP domain?

Where does the "maximum operations per application" relate to? Maybe that becomes clear when the term is clear.

How is a "user" defined? It is certainly not website users, but like admins, editors, or such system maintenance roles?

Thanks.

uli9Jan 26, 2025
Founder Team
Patxi_ba

Patxi_ba

Jan 27, 2025

A: Hi there,

Thank you for your interest in TU Latch and for pointing out the need for clarification! Let me break this down:

-> Are the AppSumo offers equivalent to the Professional Plans on the homepage?
Yes, the AppSumo offers correspond to the features and functionalities of our Professional Plans as outlined on our homepage. However, there are variations in the number of users, applications, and operations included in the offer. The core features and capabilities remain the same as those in the referenced plan.

->What is an "application" in TU Latch terms?
In TU Latch terms, an "application" refers to a single system, platform, or service that is integrated and protected using our platform. For example: CMS like WordPress; In an intranet setup, an application could be the platform used for internal communications and file sharing; etc.
Each application is essentially a distinct system or environment where TU Latch is applied to manage security and authorization.

-> Where does the "maximum operations per application" relate to?
The "maximum operations per application" refers to the number of distinct authorizations operatons that can be configured within a single application. For example, in WordPress, operations might include managing user roles, editing content, publishing drafts, or restricting plugin access. For an intranet, this could involve user authentication via an IDP (Identity Provider), controlling document access, or managing approval workflows. In databases, it might cover query permissions, table access restrictions, or user role management.

->How is a "user" defined?
"Users" are the end-users who interact with your services. They are given the ability to enable or disable various authorization operations through the Latch app (included in the plan).

Let me know if you have any other questions!
I hope this clears things up! Please let me know if you have any other questions—we’re happy to help!

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Posted: Jan 27, 2025

Thanks, that helped a lot to be clear, Patxi-ba.

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Posted: Jan 28, 2025

Is the limit of 5 operations per application too restrictive?

Founder
Posted: Jan 29, 2025

The 5 operations per application limit is designed to secure key actions within your application, such as user logins, sensitive data access oradministrative changes (examples). For many use cases, this covers the most critical operations that require an extra layer of security.