Zulip vs Mattermost
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Zulip donates itself to a nonprofit foundation as its founder joins Anthropic.
Two consequential moves landed inside three weeks. Tim Abbott, Zulip's longtime leader, is stepping back to join Anthropic along with three senior Kandra Labs engineers, and the for-profit company is being donated to a newly formed independent Zulip Foundation. In parallel, Zulip Server 12.0 shipped — roughly 5,500 commits, end-to-end encryption for mobile push notifications, a major Docker upgrade, and configurable image previews — alongside routine 11.x security patches and a self-hosted AI search integration via Atolio.
Governance is being separated from product velocity: the foundation owns long-term stewardship while the technical roadmap (E2E push, self-hostable AI integrations, hardened install path) keeps targeting security-conscious, self-hosted teams. Losing the founder to a frontier AI lab is the kind of transition that either accelerates community ownership or stalls momentum — the 12.0 commit volume suggests the team built up runway before the announcement.
Expect the Zulip Foundation to publish formal governance, a maintainer charter, and a funding model in the next quarter, and for the AI integration story (Atolio-style connectors rather than first-party AI) to harden into Zulip's positioning against Slack and Mattermost's first-party AI bets.
Mattermost leans further into the defense and sovereignty niche, pairing ABAC and user-built agents with a proactive managed-service play.
Mattermost is shipping in two registers: a substantial v11.7 release with granular ABAC, custom AI prompts, and user-created agents (Agents v2.0), and a new Mission Assurance Service that promises proactive environmental intelligence ahead of incidents. Around the product news, the blog is densely focused on sovereignty, coalition operations, AI governance, and regulated-industry positioning. Security patches across desktop and server tracks reinforce the ESR posture defense customers expect.
The company is doubling down on a clear wedge: collaboration tooling for defense, government, and regulated infrastructure where data sovereignty and access control are the buying criteria. AI is being added in a way that respects that wedge — local agents, granular ABAC, governance commentary — rather than chasing consumer-style copilots. Mission Assurance moves Mattermost from "software vendor" toward "managed mission partner."
Expect further investment in coalition-network and cross-domain features, plus deeper agent governance (audit, redaction, approvals) before the AI surface broadens. Mission Assurance is likely to evolve into a tiered support model with SLAs tied to specific mission environments.
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