Akamai, YouTube back OpenMOQ’s push for MOQ
The OpenMOQ Software Consortium has formed to advance the Media Over QUIC (MOQ) protocol, an open-source publish-subscribe protocol designed for tunable latency streaming. Charter members include Akamai, CDN77, Cisco, Red5, Synamedia, and YouTube, alongside other standard and academic members, collaborating on implementations based on IETF QUIC and WebTransport standards.
Key Takeaways
- Charter members include Akamai, CDN77, Cisco, Red5, Synamedia, and YouTube.
- OpenMOQ is built around Media Over QUIC (MOQ), described as an open-source publish-subscribe protocol for tunable latency streaming.
- The site says MOQ supports delivery across millions of sessions and can span real-time, sub-second live streaming, and VOD.
- Foundational standards cited include IETF QUIC (RFC 9000), IETF Media Over QUIC Transport (MOQT), and IETF/W3C WebTransport.
- Development status on the site says talks and alignment are complete, the technical roadmap is agreed, legal structure and governance are completed, and core software development is in progress.
Why It Matters
OpenMOQ turns MOQ from a standards effort into a multi-company implementation project, with named members spanning CDN, software, and streaming infrastructure. That matters because the consortium is focused on the application layer while relying on IETF QUIC and WebTransport underneath, which should reduce duplicated work across vendors. The broader signal is coordination around low-latency delivery without each company building its own base protocol stack. What to watch next is the first OpenMOQ reference implementation and how quickly it moves from “core infrastructure development in progress” to public software.
Read full article at openmoq.org