MOQ hits the monetization wall—and SCTE-35 is the ladder
Red5 discusses the state of ad insertion for Media over QUIC (MOQ), focusing on how SCTE-35 signaling can be carried as structured events to enable server-guided ad insertion (SGAI) and regional blackout workflows while keeping ad and primary media streams separately distributed. The article references presentations at an IETF MOQ interim meeting (Feb 2026, Google Boulder) describing an architecture using an Event Timeline track for real-time switching between program and ad tracks. Red5 also states it is developing MOQ ad workflow integrations with partners and plans to showcase MOQ/TrueTime and collect beta testers for a Red5 Cloud + CacheFly MOQ delivery network at NAB 2026.
Key Takeaways
- IETF MOQ discussions (Feb 2026, Google Boulder) showcased an ad/blackout architecture using SCTE-35 as structured events on an Event Timeline track.
- The model supports real-time switching between program and ad tracks without stitching ads into the primary media stream—signaling and media can scale independently.
- SGAI over MOQ is positioned as a practical bridge between broadcast cueing workflows and low-latency streaming delivery.
- Red5 plans NAB 2026 demos (MOQ + TrueTime) and is lining up beta testers for a globally deployed MOQ network with CacheFly.
- Near-term reality: MOQ ad insertion is promising but still “in progress,” with production readiness hinging on interoperability and measurement.
Why It Matters
MOQ’s adoption won’t be decided by latency charts—it’ll be decided by whether ad ops and rights workflows survive the protocol shift. The Event Timeline approach effectively turns SCTE-35 into a first-class control plane for MOQ: ads and blackout replacements can be triggered precisely without forcing monolithic server-side stitching, and without coupling scale of signaling to scale of video delivery. If this pattern holds, the “next-gen transport” meme becomes: separate the media plane from the monetization plane. NAB demos and early betas will reveal whether vendors can make that interoperability real across CDNs, ad decisioning, and players.
Read full article at hubs.la