Your data is coming from thousands, even 10s of thousands of sources, different formats (text, binary, JSON, …), and the final destination is a half dozen or more analysis systems, all with their own agents, formats, and security restrictions, and license limits. I think that last one is actually covered by #6 in the Bill of Rights, the ‘protection from unreasonable searches and seizures’, but I digress. You collect enormous amounts of observability data from your systems, however, once it is collected and forwarded to the various systems of analysis we tend to lose control of it, paying high license fees that lock your data into proprietary systems with no easy way out. Ok, ok, maybe I got a little carried away there, but the premise is valid. Back then it was tea being restricted and regulated, now it’s your data, your Tea-lemetry data, your securi- Tea data, and your observabili- Tea data that they want to control! It’s time for a new revolution, á la Boston Harbor 250 years ago. Authoritarian vendors restrict access and movement they dictate proprietary formatting and even limit what can be commingled with your data, then apply enormous tax burdens (i.e. But what about digital independence? Removing the tyrannical yoke of control over your observability data. We celebrate freedom of movement, freedom of assembly, removal of excessive taxation, and much, much more.
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