• Kaltura's Open Source Video Management Platform Emphasizes User Participation

    I've been hearing from a number of colleagues about Kaltura, an open source video management platform, and finally got a chance to learn more in a recent briefing with Lisa Bennett, the company's director of marketing.

    VideoNuze readers know I've spilled lots of ink covering the broadband video management and publishing platform space. I've continued to express surprise at the sheer number of companies in this category and the money that's been poured into it by eager venture capital investors. To date there's been a lot of business to go around; of course now the nagging question is whether the economic downturn is going to force an early shakeout.

    Kaltura will be putting additional pressure on other competitors if for no other reason than its intention to offer a viable, low-priced alternative video platform. The company is positioning itself as a cost effective and flexible alternative to bigger proprietary platforms on the market. For now, it's not really an apples to apples comparison, as Kaltura has not yet aggressively pursued big media company deals.

    One of Kaltura's key differentiators is what Lisa calls its "architecture of participation." This is evident with its range of community-oriented features, user-generated upload capability, online video editing and emphasis on engaging users with projects and collaboration. A perfect example of this latter piece is a deal the company's announcing today where the Coca-Cola Blastbeat program in Ireland (a sort of online, teen-centric battle of the bands project) is using Kaltura's platform.

    Adding further weight to its user participation emphasis are deals with the Wikimedia Foundation and Wikia for a Kaltura extension allowing wiki builders to easily add video to their sites. Another is Kaltura's recent release of a plug-in for WordPress, one of the most popular blogging platforms. Lisa said the company has a number of other projects of this sort on its roadmap, as it tries to embed itself as the go-to video platform for the large self-serve ecosystem of user-generated content.

    Kaltura's relatively new on the video management scene and there's no shortage of competition. Still, its open source approach gives it a lot of pricing flexibility plus leverage in building out its platform. These are real assets in an economic environment where a segment of content providers will no doubt be looking for viable, cost-effective alternatives.

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