Spain Gets a ‘Sovereign’ Streaming CDNaaS Play
Synamedia and Spanish consultancy/systems integrator MoMe announced the launch of a streaming-optimised CDN-as-a-service in Spain, powered by Synamedia Fluid EdgeCDN and operated on Spanish infrastructure. The service is deployed across eight data centers in Spain and is positioned to provide broadcasters and OTT platforms with end-to-end delivery visibility, QoS/QoE monitoring, and low-latency performance via edge locations close to end users. MoMe plans to offer the service through its subsidiary Argos Technology Services and to provide multi-CDN delivery outside Spain via integration with Synamedia Quortex Switch.
Key Takeaways
- MoMe launches a streaming-focused CDNaaS in Spain powered by Synamedia Fluid EdgeCDN
- Deployment spans eight data centers in Spain, emphasizing edge proximity for low latency
- Positioning centers on end-to-end delivery visibility (QoS/QoE) and operational control from origin to viewer
- Go-to-market runs through MoMe’s subsidiary Argos Technology Services
- Expansion beyond Spain is planned via multi-CDN integration using Synamedia Quortex Switch
Why It Matters
This is the “private CDN is back” meme, with a regional twist: data-residency, regulatory comfort, and accountability wrapped into a CDNaaS that’s explicitly tuned for video. For execs, it signals growing pushback against generic hyperscale delivery where cost predictability and granular observability can be hard to pin down—especially for live sports and peak events. For engineers, the pitch is fewer vendor handoffs and more controllable performance, plus edge-adjacent processing (ingest/encode/package) as a differentiator. Expect more country-by-country “sovereign streaming CDN” plays as markets fragment and QoE becomes a board-level metric.
Read full article at synamedia.com