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Keep up with video in 5 minutes

11 September, 2025

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This week wasn’t about big announcements. The more interesting stuff showed up in small feature rollouts, quiet platform shifts, and a few updates that might end up being more important than they look.

Monetization

Monetization Illustration

There’s a quiet land grab happening in ad-supported streaming, and it’s not just coming from Netflix or YouTube.

Fubo launched 20 live sports channels for $55.99/month, chasing bundled sports AVOD for fans who’ve dropped cable. At the same time, Yahoo Sports quietly rolled out its own CTV channel, proving that if you already own the audience, you don’t need to outspend on originals.

The AVOD market is expected to reach $928 billion by 2032. But it’s not growing because of traditional ad slots, it’s growing because formats are getting smarter.

FAST channels grew 14% YoY, mostly driven by genre-specific channels like horror marathons and local news loops. Viewers aren't asking for fewer ads, they're asking for content that fits. The stream is becoming a schedule again, just algorithmically built.

Jio-Hotstar now claims to be the second-largest streaming service globally with 300M paid users, and it’s leaning heavily into cricket + free ad-supported video bundles to scale reach.

And Apple’s recent TV+ price hike might just be the setup for their long-awaited ad tier. Everyone’s chasing margin, but the ones winning are doing it by shaping the format, not just selling more impressions.

Building Better

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This one flew under most people’s radar: FFmpeg 8 dropped Vulkan-powered codec support, unlocking GPU-accelerated workflows for teams encoding 4K+ video, live channels, or rendering adaptive ladders on the fly.

Meanwhile, YouTube is using AI to edit videos without permission. No opt-in. Just edits. Great for scale, bad for trust. This isn’t just an AI ethics problem, it’s a product ownership problem — especially in creator workflows where editorial control is the brand.

And on the smarter broadcast side, Prime Video is injecting AI-powered telemetry into its NASCAR coverage. Real-time data becomes visual overlays, blurring the line between storytelling and stat-crunching.

Also worth noting: Wohler just launched an MPEG IP monitor that may become standard for playout QA.

Understanding Viewers

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In the UK, live sports piracy just hit an all-time high, driven by geo-blocks, inconsistent quality, and laggy live streams.

It’s not just a consumer issue anymore — platforms are taking real steps. YuppTV filed a major lawsuit against a cross-border IPTV piracy ring operating across Asia and the Middle East. Broadcasters are getting proactive, investing in on-the-ground anti-piracy tech, from watermarking to real-time tracing.

DRM solutions are also back in focus, but this time with smarter implementation. Platforms are adopting geo-aware, tokenized delivery systems that do more than block access — they observe behavior and prevent leaks at the stream level.

And it’s not just piracy anymore. Top creators are raising red flags about livestream deepfakes. AI-generated clones can now mimic a real person in real time, and it’s already happening in low-moderation corners of the internet.

Platforms that depend on authenticity — live Q&As, shopping, performances — might need to secure more than just access. They’ll need to secure identity.

Creating a Better Viewing Experience

Amazon and Peacock are leaning into live sports this month, with schedules that feel more like TV. It helps viewers know when to show up and makes the experience easier to commit to. That matters when you’re competing with endless scroll.

Max added autoplaying previews to its homepage, following Netflix’s lead. When a platform feels active, users spend less time deciding and more time watching.

But there are limits. Prime Video is testing longer ad breaks, and some users are already pushing back. If ads start to feel like friction instead of part of the flow, retention becomes harder to protect.

Video podcast engagement is also up, especially on mobile. People aren’t just listening, they’re watching full episodes, often passively. That’s reshaping how platforms treat playback design and even what counts as “viewing.”

And Cineverse is now building apps for in-vehicle streaming, optimized for EV dashboards. That’s not just about tech novelty — it’s about understanding that where content is consumed should shape how it’s delivered.

What’s Next in Streaming Tech

Illustration of a viewer with laptop

Vertical video is no longer just a TikTok format. It’s becoming a full pipeline.

Winzo just launched a short video platform in the U.S., focused on swipeable, mobile-native content. Not creator-driven, platform-driven. They're treating it like infrastructure, not a trend.

Cornerstone Entertainment is building full vertical drama series designed to be watched on phones. Episodic pacing, portrait orientation, short runtimes — all optimized for mobile viewing without rotating the screen.

These formats only make sense if delivery is efficient, and that’s changing too. Beamr’s latest codec test showed up to 50% better compression for high-res video. That’s the kind of shift that turns vertical streaming from expensive novelty into viable global delivery.

At the same time, Versatile Video Coding (VVC) is picking up traction behind the scenes. It’s not in every player yet, but support is growing, and for platforms planning ahead, this is probably the codec they’ll be using in five years.

One more signal: PlayTV AI just launched a real-time translation platform, focused on live YouTube streams. It listens, translates, and re-broadcasts, opening up multilingual streaming without needing separate versions. Could reshape how localization works, especially for creators.

All of this points to the same direction: Streaming is getting more modular, more mobile, and more global. If your platform still assumes landscape-only, one-language-fits-all, desktop-first video, it may be time to rethink that foundation.

This Month at FastPix

FastPix Language SDKs are now live for Python, Node.js, Go, PHP, C#, and Ruby, with full support for video uploads, live streaming, playback, and more, so you can build in your language of choice without glue code.

And a big one: FastPix Player now supports shoppable video themes, letting you embed interactive shopping experiences directly inside your videos, turning viewers into buyers without ever leaving playback.

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