Third party is often used in the English language in connection with any relationship between two parties or entities to refer to some other person or entity with some involvement, and may refer to:
Third party (politics), in any two-party system of politics, a third party is a party other than the two dominant ones
Third-party developer, a hardware or software developer not directly tied to the primary product that a consumer is using.
Third-party software component is a reusable software component developed to be either freely distributed or sold by an entity other than the original vendor of the development platform
Third-party Maintenance, (TPM) is a maintenance provider other than the maintained product's manufacturer or the owner of said product. This term is frequently used in the computer maintenance industry.
Third party beneficiary, a person who may have the right to sue on a contract, despite not having originally been a party to the contract; see also, Privity of contract
Third-party verification (TPV) is a process of getting an independent third party company to confirm that the customer is actually requesting a change or ordering a new service or product
Third party technique is a marketing strategy commonly employed by public relations firms, that involves placing a premeditated message in the "mouth of the media"
Third party reproduction refers to a process where another person provides sperm or eggs or where another woman provides her uterus so that a woman can have a child
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
Note: This page may need to be cleaned up to meet Wikipedia's quality standards. See WikiProject Disambiguation for more information.