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AWS singlesignon documentation change

Service: singlesignon · 2025-08-13 · Documentation low

File: singlesignon/latest/userguide/tutorials.md

Summary

Grammatical updates ('don't' to 'do not' and 'you're' to 'you are') in tutorial descriptions.

Security assessment

Purely editorial changes with no impact on security documentation or vulnerabilities.

Diff

diff --git a/singlesignon/latest/userguide/tutorials.md b/singlesignon/latest/userguide/tutorials.md
index 68c7df9b3..c0a5dc545 100644
--- a//singlesignon/latest/userguide/tutorials.md
+++ b//singlesignon/latest/userguide/tutorials.md
@@ -9 +9 @@ Video tutorials
-You can connect your existing identity source in your AWS Organizations management account to [an organization instance of IAM Identity Center](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/singlesignon/latest/userguide/what-is.html). If you don't have an existing identity provider, you can create and manage users directly in the default IAM Identity Center directory. You can have one identity source per organization. 
+You can connect your existing identity source in your AWS Organizations management account to [an organization instance of IAM Identity Center](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/singlesignon/latest/userguide/what-is.html). If you do not have an existing identity provider, you can create and manage users directly in the default IAM Identity Center directory. You can have one identity source per organization. 
@@ -11 +11 @@ You can connect your existing identity source in your AWS Organizations manageme
-The tutorials in this section describe how to set up an organization instance of IAM Identity Center with a commonly used identity source, create an administrative user, and if you're using IAM Identity Center to manage access to AWS accounts, create and configure permission sets. If you’re using IAM Identity Center for application access only, you do not need to use permission sets.
+The tutorials in this section describe how to set up an organization instance of IAM Identity Center with a commonly used identity source, create an administrative user, and if you are using IAM Identity Center to manage access to AWS accounts, create and configure permission sets. If you’re using IAM Identity Center for application access only, you do not need to use permission sets.