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Google Meet

retrained man standing in a water tank sitting on a stage in front of an audience

Reverse-Engineering Standards e2ee, Google Meet, insertable streams

End-to-End Encryption in WebRTC… 4 Years Later

We covered End-to-end encryption (E2EE) before, first back in 2020 when Zoom’s claims to do E2EE were demystified (not just by us; they later got fined $85m for this), followed by the quite exciting beta implementation of E2EE in Jitsi using Chromium’s Insertable Streams API. A bit later we had Matrix explain how their approach […]

Philipp Hancke · March 12, 2024

Reverse-Engineering av1, Google Meet, k-SVC, SVC, VP9, webrtc-internals

The Hidden AV1 Gift in Google Meet

Earlier last week a friend at Google reached out to me asking Does Meet do anything weird with scalabilityMode? Apparently, I am the go-to when it comes to Google Meet behaving weirdly :). Well, I do have a decade of history observing Meet’s implementation, so this makes some sense! It turned out that this was […]

Philipp Hancke · December 19, 2023

Reverse-Engineering Blackbox Exploration, Duo, e2ee, google, Google Meet, Opus, ssltcp, VP9, webrtc-internals

Meet vs. Duo – 2 faces of Google’s WebRTC

A very detailed look at the WebRTC implementations of Google Meet and Google Duo and how they compare using webrtc-internals and some reverse engineering.

Gustavo Garcia · June 15, 2022

Other Chrome, chromestatus, Google Meet, plan b, unified-plan

How is WebRTC doing and who is driving usage? (Hint: Google Meet)

I have been looking at these Chrome usage statistics available on chromestatus.com for a while together with Tsahi Levent-Levi for WebRTC Insights but they are too fascinating to keep them behind our paywall. Let’s do some coffee ground reading on the usage of a number of important APIs and what it tells us about what […]

Philipp Hancke · December 14, 2021

Technology Google Meet, hangouts, jitsi, sfu, simulcast, webrtc-internals

Suspending Simulcast Streams for Savvy Streamlining (Brian Baldino)

If you’re new to WebRTC, Jitsi was the first open source Selective Forwarding Unit (SFU) and continues to be one of the most popular WebRTC platforms. They were in the news last week because their parent group inside Atlassian was sold off to Slack but the team clarified this does not have any impact on the Jitsi […]

Brian Baldino · August 6, 2018

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