How to Choose Secure App for LaTeX Formulas in Confluence
Once math formulas become part of Confluence, the app that renders them becomes part of your infrastructure. So the question “How do I add LaTeX formulas in Confluence?” quickly transforms into a more important one: “How do I choose a LaTeX math app for Confluence that won’t become a security or reliability liability later?”
Let’s break it down.
Start with the Atlassian badges (they’re not decorative)
When evaluating an app in the Atlassian Marketplace, it’s better to pay attention to these three security and trust signals: Runs on Atlassian, Cloud Fortified, and Bug Bounty program participant.
Runs on Atlassian
The Runs on Atlassian badge indicates that the LaTeX app runs on Atlassian’s Cloud infrastructure rather than on the vendor’s external servers.
Why that matters:
- Your data stays within Atlassian’s cloud infrastructure.
- There is no external data egress without admin approval.
- The app is aligned with your existing data residency policies.
- You get faster security approvals since data stays in an already-trusted environment.
- Compliance is simplified as there is no need for extensive security reviews of vendor infrastructure and hosting practices.
If your company operates in regulated industries (finance, defence, healthcare, enterprise SaaS), this badge is often a key requirement when choosing a LaTeX app for rendering Confluence formulas.

Cloud Fortified
The Cloud Fortified badge means that the app meets additional enterprise-level standards defined by Atlassian. Imagine a page with 80+ LaTeX formulas failing to render before a stakeholder review. Not ideal. That’s why, to earn this badge, the LaTeX math app must:
- Meet reliability requirements, including synthetic testing and incident management processes
- Provide 24-hour support response for critical issues (5 days/week)
- Undergo additional security reviews via the Bug Bounty Program
- Document security practices transparently
So this badge indicates that Atlassian has reviewed the app for security, reliability, and support practices.
Bug Bounty program participant
It is also worth mentioning the participation in the Marketplace Security Bug Bounty program. It is an Atlassian Security program aimed at encouraging external researchers to test the app for vulnerabilities.
This trust signal matters because security isn’t static. And apps that invite external testing are typically more transparent about risks and respond more quickly when something is discovered.
Check performance under real conditions
Badges are the foundation, but performance still matters. When evaluating a LaTeX math app, check if it works correctly with:
- 100+ equations on one page
- export to PDF
- complex formulas
A well-built LaTeX math app for Confluence should feel native with no layout jumps or broken rendering.
Dark mode — more important than you think for LaTeX formulas in Confluence
And a small but still important detail, if your team reviews technical docs daily, it’s worth checking how well a LaTeX math app supports dark mode. If Confluence formulas are rendered as blocks of white on dark-mode pages, math equations become harder to parse and look like something is broken.
A Confluence LaTeX app with good dark mode support adapts rendering automatically so that math symbols, fractions, integrals, and matrices remain clear and contrasty.

Free vs. secure: the wrong comparison
There is always a question: “Is there a free app for math equations in Confluence?”
That’s understandable. But here’s the nuance: your Confluence content isn’t free as it contains sensitive data, internal information, and your team’s research. Then the real comparison transforms from free vs. paid into low accountability vs. supported, maintained, enterprise-ready software.
Paid apps often include SLAs, dedicated support, regular updates, and compliance documentation. And when something breaks, there’s always someone responsible for fixing it.
TL;DR: What does a secure LaTeX app for Confluence actually look like?
If we put everything together, a secure and reliable LaTeX math app for Confluence should:
- Run on Atlassian infrastructure
- Meet Cloud Fortified requirements
- Participate in the Bug Bounty Program
- Work reliably at scale
- Feel native inside the Confluence editor
In other words, it should behave like infrastructure rather than just a formatting app.
That’s exactly the approach behind the LaTeX Math for Confluence app. It runs on Atlassian infrastructure, has the Cloud Fortified badge, participates in the Marketplace Bug Bounty Program, and is designed to render LaTeX formulas in Confluence reliably at scale.
The app provides a secure formula rendering inside your documentation without unexpected surprises. If you would like to try our app, you can install it directly from the Atlassian Marketplace, or check out our guide on adding LaTeX math to Confluence for more details.
You’re free to choose any Confluence LaTeX app that fits your team’s needs. Just make sure it meets the same security and reliability standards as the rest of your infrastructure.
To explore more about working with LaTeX formulas in Confluence, these resources may also be of help:
