The global and independent platform for the SAP community.

Indirect use: data sovereignty

SAP is a monster. Not only does it want to be fed with new licenses, it also takes users' data hostage. Indirect use" hides the data GAU for SAP's existing customers - but Theseus has slain the Minotaur.
Peter M. Färbinger, E3 Magazine
June 2, 2016
The-Last-Satire
avatar
This text has been automatically translated from German to English.

There are good and evil monsters. In the creepy fairy tales and ancient Greece, they have to be fed with virgins and young men. This is a cruel way of tribute. In modern times, you have to buy software licenses every year.

A benign monster is R/3 because, with proper care, sometimes very expensive, it can give its owners a lot of pleasure in return. It is voracious but predictable.

Minotaur, at the center of the labyrinth built by Daedalus, was an evil monster. NetWeaver Foundation for Third Party Applications is also an evil monster because it stayed hidden for a long time and at the beginning of last year burst out of the depths of the PKL (SAP's price and conditions list) with a tremendous roar.

Rumors about its existence have been around for many years, but no one dared to speak its true name - thus the SAP community only talked about the phenomenon of "indirect use" behind closed doors.

But because Walldorf doesn't believe in rumors, everyone tried to pretend that the threat was irrelevant. But the dear SAP customers didn't count on the host.

The "NetWeaver Foundation for Third Party Applications" monster exists and is probably one of the most insidious licensing models of all time.

The danger of NetWeaver Foundation is twofold: First, you have to understand from which direction the danger comes, where the monster is lying in wait for you. Second, you have to know what sacrifices to make to satisfy the monster.

There are two very different booty schemas: SAP's PKL reveals an engine schema and a user schema. If the existing SAP customer has opted for a license scheme to appease the monster, a later change is no longer possible - once you have opted for a diesel vehicle, your environmental conscience can torment you no matter how much, a change to gasoline is out of the question.

However, the moment of danger is much more insidious. Standardized and annual license measurement does not allow the monster "NetWeaver Foundation for Third Party Applications" to be tracked down.

The SAP existing customer is in the dark and never knows when the attack will occur. SAP has thus issued the general warning: Attention! Indirect use! In operational use with numerous modifications, Z programs and add-ons, however, this generic notice is no help.

Indirect use only describes the danger but not the solution: the monster working in secret swallows all the users' data and thus robs them of their data sovereignty.

You don't see NetWeaver Foundation, but you feel it as a demand from Walldorf for back license payments. There is no antidote, because in an SAP ERP/ECC all data ultimately ends up in the central database - the belly of the monster.

Access to this data with tools other than those certified by SAP falls under the generic warning "indirect use". The existing SAP customer is thus incapacitated and immediately loses control over its own data. The monster has struck from the darkness and won.

avatar
Peter M. Färbinger, E3 Magazine

Peter M. Färbinger, Publisher and Editor-in-Chief E3 Magazine DE, US and ES (e3mag.com), B4Bmedia.net AG, Freilassing (DE), E-Mail: pmf@b4bmedia.net and Tel. +49(0)8654/77130-21


Write a comment

Working on the SAP basis is crucial for successful S/4 conversion. 

This gives the Competence Center strategic importance for existing SAP customers. Regardless of the S/4 Hana operating model, topics such as Automation, Monitoring, Security, Application Lifecycle Management and Data Management the basis for S/4 operations.

For the second time, E3 magazine is organizing a summit for the SAP community in Salzburg to provide comprehensive information on all aspects of S/4 Hana groundwork.

Venue

More information will follow shortly.

Event date

Wednesday, May 21, and
Thursday, May 22, 2025

Early Bird Ticket

Available until Friday, January 24, 2025
EUR 390 excl. VAT

Regular ticket

EUR 590 excl. VAT

Venue

Hotel Hilton Heidelberg
Kurfürstenanlage 1
D-69115 Heidelberg

Event date

Wednesday, March 5, and
Thursday, March 6, 2025

Tickets

Regular ticket
EUR 590 excl. VAT
Early Bird Ticket

Available until December 24, 2024

EUR 390 excl. VAT
The event is organized by the E3 magazine of the publishing house B4Bmedia.net AG. The presentations will be accompanied by an exhibition of selected SAP partners. The ticket price includes attendance at all presentations of the Steampunk and BTP Summit 2025, a visit to the exhibition area, participation in the evening event and catering during the official program. The lecture program and the list of exhibitors and sponsors (SAP partners) will be published on this website in due course.