Strapi is a very promising piece of tech that enables great productivity and helps us with the data required for building sites using static website generators.
I wonder why I've got downvoted. It might sound like and advertisement but it's actually true.
We use Strapi in production alongside Eleventy, a simple static website generator.
One thing we've been missing with Strapi however is the possibility to localize content. I know the issue was raised but I'm not aware of any roadmap and we needed to hack our way around this limitation.
I'm currently feeling the pain of missing localization support and I'm considering building a service to add and automate it. DM @handheld on Twitter if you'd like to weigh in on features.
I'm using Strapi & 11ty too. I have 'pages' and 'posts' with properties 'content' and 'locale'. That's how I manage i18n. That's for the main content. For small strings used in other parts of the UI I'm using json files with i18n strings that 11ty injects into the views.
They already have most of your browsing history simply by having you logged into your Gmail and browsing the sites having Google Analytics installed (which is most of the sites on the internet these days).
I could see using this for fraud detection and then kick off a 2FA flow if it couldn't verify.
However, most biometrics aren't the best single line of verification. You still have to add a backup verification of some kind.
Examples, I was working on my car all weekend and my hands have new calluses on them and my finger print is off. I got a new keyboard and my typing pattern is different, etc.
This is not aimed to become an Invision competitor. There are however people for which Invision is too much and only need a simple way to share and collect a quick feedback one something they've been working on.
Agreed Invision can be way too feature rich. Redpen (https://redpen.io/) does an amazing job of filling that void. They boast tens of thousands of paying users, how are you planning to market based on Invision and Redpen as incumbents?
Verticalise (I know, I know, give me sh*t for creating jargon...).
Don't go after the generalist approach, focus on a niche where UX or design thinking is a growing area, own the marketing for it, and then you can move to another niche. Perhaps aim at social media agencies looking for creative approval from their clients etc, own a smaller market and grow out from there.