Jitsi
jitsi.org“More secure, more flexible, and completely free video conferencing”
What is Jitsi doing right now?
8x8 acquisition emphasizes investment and tighter integration with PSTN, livestreaming, recording and transcription services for deployments.
Major infra upgrades (JVB 2.0, SSRC rewriting, geo-bridge cascading, low-latency streaming) target large meetings and global scale reliability.
Jitsi highlights end-to-end encryption, cross-platform E2EE, user verification and now requires login for room creation to reduce abuse.
— Spydomo competitive analysis · jitsi.org · Apr 2026
How Jitsi Plays to Win
Strategic integration with a PBX signals platform consolidation and improved workflow (single-click + JWT) — repeated partner integrations trend.
Strategic GTM shift: managed CPaaS positioning plus SDK launches (multiple announcements) broadens commercial avenues.
Repeated security theme and policy change (auth requirement) signals prioritization of trust and moderation.
How Jitsi Positions vs. the Category
Positioning analysis updated monthly.
Signal History
Top-scored signals from the last 30 days — ranked by engagement, novelty, and strategic weight.
Vodia PBX version 70.1 adds a Jitsi Meet integration for embedded, self-hosted video conferencing. The update emphasizes tighter voice-video workflows, access control, and scalable deployment within one system.
The post explains how to self-host Jitsi Meet on Ubuntu VPS, framing it as a free, open-source browser-based conferencing tool. It emphasizes accountless use, encrypted communication, and no client installation.
Jitsi announces its acceptance into Google Summer of Code 2025 and invites contributors to propose and build open-source projects. The post focuses on community participation, application timing, and available onboarding resources.
Jitsi presents SIP integration as a way to connect meetings with phones, softphones, Zoom rooms, and telephony systems. The post focuses on setup steps and technical components for audio/video dial-in, including an audio-only option for lower bandwidth use.
Jitsi introduces SSRC rewriting to improve scalability in very large calls by limiting signaling and decoder creation. The change reduces backend load and client-side resource usage, especially in meetings with hundreds of endpoints.
