← Back to home
Comparison · Collab

Zulip vs Mattermost

Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.

Zulip logo
Zulip
COLLABCOMMS
5.0

Zulip donates itself to a nonprofit foundation as its founder joins Anthropic.

◆ Current state

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.

◆ Where it's heading

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.

◆ Prediction

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.

M7.5

Mattermost leans further into the defense and sovereignty niche, pairing ABAC and user-built agents with a proactive managed-service play.

◆ Current state

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.

◆ Where it's heading

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."

◆ Prediction

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.

See more alternatives to Zulip
See more alternatives to Mattermost