JioStar’s IPL playbook: design for 100M, not 10M
Broadpeak summarizes a discussion with JioStar CTO Akash Saxena on engineering and operating live cricket streaming in India at very high concurrency, citing IPL peaks of 32M (2023), 63M (2024), and 55M (2025) streams and planning scenarios approaching 100M concurrent viewers. The article highlights a hybrid delivery approach combining public cloud CDNs with infrastructure deployed within telecom networks, along with in-house SSAI at scale, anti-piracy enforcement, and increasing operational automation for live-event reliability.
Key Takeaways
- Peak planning is shifting from tens of millions to ~100M concurrent viewers—capacity models must prioritize burst behavior, not averages.
- Hybrid delivery is positioned as mandatory at this scale: multi-CDN plus infrastructure deployed deep in ISP/telco networks to reduce latency and control cost.
- SSAI is treated as core platform infrastructure (not an overlay), tightly coupled with playback and delivery to monetize tens of millions of streams.
- Anti-piracy, entitlement, and fraud controls are first-class operational requirements because malicious/illegal traffic impacts both revenue and infrastructure stability.
- Operations are moving from “war rooms” to automation-first, with humans escalating only when systems flag anomalies.
Why It Matters
Live sports is turning into the streaming industry’s most unforgiving benchmark: the winner isn’t the service with the best average QoE, it’s the one that survives the goal/wicket moment without collapsing. JioStar’s approach reinforces a growing meme: at extreme scale, delivery, ads, security, and ops converge into one reliability system. For CDNs, SSPs/SSAI vendors, and telcos, this points to deeper network deployment, tighter ad-path integration, and real-time enforcement as table stakes. For executives, “100M-ready” is becoming a strategic posture—capex, partnerships, and automation plans now have to match it.
Read full article at broadpeak.tv