Livestorm vs Mux
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Livestorm pivots toward enterprise AI-augmented webinars with MCP, live translation, and usage-based pricing.
Livestorm is repositioning a webinar-first product toward AI-augmented enterprise events. Recent moves include an MCP integration for agent-driven workflows, live translation that extends past captions into multilingual delivery, and a usage-based pricing redesign aimed at reducing per-seat friction. A €4.6M Series A and HubSpot certified-partner status anchor the enterprise push.
The arc is clearly toward AI-native event tooling and enterprise distribution. Livestorm is layering automation (MCP), accessibility (live translation), and CRM ecosystem fit (HubSpot) on top of a more flexible commercial model. The shift from per-host pricing to attendee-based metering signals a play for larger, less predictable enterprise workloads.
Expect deeper agentic features built on the MCP foundation — autonomous webinar prep, agenda generation, and post-event follow-up. Additional CRM integrations and analytics tied to the usage-based pricing model are the next plausible wave.
Mux ships its first AI product line (Robots) and closes the DRM offline-playback gap.
Mux is in two parallel tracks. On the core video platform it's closing long-standing input and output gaps — DRM-protected offline playback via persistent license tokens in JWTs, a paired Swift player SDK that downloads and plays FairPlay-protected assets offline, and AAC 5.1 surround as standard input — while continuing to enrich Mux Data with new instrumentation like network change events. In parallel, Mux Robots — the company's first hosted AI workflows product (summarize, moderate, translate captions, analyze) — is in technical preview, with the free window now extended to mid-June and workflow-unit pricing freshly recalibrated.
Mux is layering an AI workflows product on top of its established video API rather than rebuilding around it, and quietly extending the platform's enterprise reach (DRM offline, surround audio, deeper analytics). The Robots preview extension and pricing reset signal the company is still calibrating monetization on the AI product before committing to GA pricing.
Expect Mux Robots to add at least one more first-party workflow primitive (likely chaptering, scene tagging, or auto-cuts) and to graduate from technical preview within the next quarter, with finalized per-workflow-unit pricing tied to the recalibration that just landed.
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