SRT Cloud launches AI-managed live video distribution with zero hardware
SRT Cloud has launched a new service enabling users to distribute live SRT feeds by creating unlimited identical copies with AI assistance. The platform simplifies broadcast distribution for broadcasters, telcos, and media-delivery teams by operating entirely in the cloud without requiring hardware, and supports the full SRT specification. Users can manage streams and partners through an AI assistant, with a flat pricing model per stream.
Key Takeaways
- Supports the full SRT specification including AES-256 encryption, configurable latency, and ARQ packet-loss recovery.
- Eliminates transcoding and re-encoding to ensure frame-for-frame identical copies across all distributed endpoints.
- Integrated AI assistant interface allows users to manage streams and partners via natural language commands using Claude or ChatGPT.
- Pricing follows a flat monthly license per stream with no data overage fees or metered cloud charges.
Why It Matters
The shift from hardware-reliant SDI routers to AI-orchestrated cloud distribution marks a significant move toward 'invisible' infrastructure. By abstracting complex SRT configurations into natural language commands, SRT Cloud lowers the technical barrier for regional distribution and one-off event syndication. This model aligns with a broader trend of commoditizing transport protocols, pressuring traditional managed-service providers to justify premiums against flat-rate, automated alternatives. As broadcasters increasingly adopt hybrid workflows, watch for how this self-service replication impacts the market share of established satellite and fiber contribution networks.
Additional Context
The launch of SRT Cloud arrives as the SRT protocol reaches a record 78% adoption rate among broadcast professionals in 2026, according to Haivision’s seventh annual Broadcast Transformation Report released in March 2026. This represents a 31% increase since 2020, solidifying SRT as the dominant industry standard for transport over unmanaged networks. The protocol’s growth is increasingly tied to the industry's pivot toward remote production, which 41% of broadcasters now cite as their primary technology priority for the current year. Simultaneously, external infrastructure providers are embedding AI into the core of live delivery. Per Light Reading (June 2026), SCTE's TechExpo26 has prioritized sessions on 'Autonomous Networks' and 'AI-powered infrastructure' as the industry moves beyond simple speeds to experience-driven connectivity. For high-stakes events like the FIFA World Cup 2026, Lenovo is already deploying AI-driven infrastructure to reduce IPTV latency to under five seconds (per Frontier Enterprise, June 2026). This broader environment of AI-managed video delivery validates SRT Cloud’s approach of using agentic assistants like Claude and ChatGPT to handle routine routing and endpoint management. Furthermore, the 2026 market for cloud video streaming is projected by Intel Market Research to reach roughly $8.56 billion this year, driven by the demand for low-latency distribution that can scale to millions of viewers without the overhead of physical transmission hubs. Broadcasters are balancing this modernization with existing stable infrastructure; while cloud-native tools like SRT Cloud are expanding, approximately 82% of respondents in the Haivision report still leverage SDI for their primary operational backbone, necessitating hybrid solutions that can bridge legacy on-premise hardware with high-velocity cloud distribution.
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