diff --git a/apps/marketing/content/blog/why-i-started-documenso.mdx b/apps/marketing/content/blog/why-i-started-documenso.mdx index dc165dad5..13db38209 100644 --- a/apps/marketing/content/blog/why-i-started-documenso.mdx +++ b/apps/marketing/content/blog/why-i-started-documenso.mdx @@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ And to be honest, I just always liked digital signature tools. It’s a product, Building a company is so complex, it can’t be planned out. Basing it on great fundamentals and the expected dynamics it is the best founders can do in my humble opinion. After these fundamental decisions, you are (almost) just along for the ride and need to focus on solving the “conventional” problems of starting a company the best you can. With digital signatures hitting so many points of my personal and professional checklist, this already was a great fit. What got me excited at first though, apart from the perspective of drinking caffeine and coding, was this: -Roughly 13 years ago, I was launching my first product. We obviously wanted SSL encryption on the product site, so I had to buy an SSL certificate. ~$200ish, 2 years validity, from VeriSign I think. Apart from it being ridiculously complicated to get, even back then it bothered me, that we had basically paid for $200 for what is essentially a long number, someone generated. SSL wasn’t even that widespread back then, because it was mainly considered important for ecommerce, no wonder considering it costed so much. “Why would I encrypt a blog?”. Fast forward to today, and everyone can get a free SSL cert courtesy of Let’s Encrypt and browsers basically block unencrypted sites. Mostly even build into hosting plattforms so you barely even notice as a developer. +Roughly 13 years ago, I was launching my first product. We obviously wanted SSL encryption on the product site, so I had to buy an SSL certificate. ~$200ish, 2 years validity, from VeriSign I think. Apart from it being ridiculously complicated to get, even back then it bothered me, that we had basically paid for $200 for what is essentially a long number, someone generated. SSL wasn’t even that widespread back then, because it was mainly considered important for e-commerce, no wonder considering it cost so much. “Why would I encrypt a blog?”. Fast forward to today, and everyone can get a free SSL cert courtesy of Let’s Encrypt and browsers block unencrypted sites. Mostly even build into hosting platforms so you barely even notice as a developer. I had forgotten all about that story until I realized, this is where signing is today. A global need, fullfilled only by closed ecosystem, not really state-of-the-art companies, leading to, let’s call it steep prices. I had for so long considered Let’s Encrypt a pillar of the open internet, that I forgot that they weren’t always there. One day someone said, let’s make the internet better. Signing is another domain, that should have had an open ecosystem for a long time. Another parallel to that story is the fact that the cryptographic certificates you need for document signing are also stuck in the “pre Let’s Encrypt world”. Free document signing certificates via "Let’s Sign" are now another todo on the [longterm roadmap](https://documen.so/roadmap) list for open signing ecossytem. Actually effecting this change in any way, is a huge driver for me, personally.