True enough, but by that standard, every service would constitute lock-in. A cleaning company isn't lock-in just because you don't have in-house janitors.
"Vendor lock-in" means that you're tied at a business-critical level to some proprietary technology _that you can't get anywhere else_.
If you rent Linux servers, Postgres databases, or even k8s setups from Azure, there's no shortage of alternative vendors willing to sell you compatible product should you tire of MS, and ideally you won't need to change much more than a few endpoints. However, if your entire user base lives in Azure AD, it's a very different story.
"Vendor lock-in" means that you're tied at a business-critical level to some proprietary technology _that you can't get anywhere else_.
If you rent Linux servers, Postgres databases, or even k8s setups from Azure, there's no shortage of alternative vendors willing to sell you compatible product should you tire of MS, and ideally you won't need to change much more than a few endpoints. However, if your entire user base lives in Azure AD, it's a very different story.