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I always believed that when it came to software for a platform the parties were referred to as such:

First-party: The owner/creator of the platform

Second-party: The user of the platform

Third-party: A developer who is not the first-party.

Now second-party seems to be used to refer to a developer owned/contracted by the owner/creator of the platform. When did this change in terminology come about and do we solely refer to "user created software" as such?

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I think the notion goes back to commercial arrangements. The first and second parties are in a direct producer-purchaser relationship. The third-party parties are those other than the first party that the second party is dealing with. (Note that grammatical person doesn't quite fit, but it is a cute idea. It works better if the first party is the customer and the second-party is the primary supplier.)

In this context, it is perhaps overloading too much on the term to say second-party developer. The second-party might be an IT organization and have to do many activities to install and use the products and services of the first-party. It might farm out a lot of that to third parties, too.

Perhaps the key thing is that the third party is generally not part of the (business) relationship between the first and second parties.

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I agree, I always assumed it was a pun or extension of standard English grammar: first person, second person, and third person.

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I think it went away around the same time the phrase "Second-World" disappeared.

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I never heard of that one. Probably just a local thing.

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