Tool dossier

Jitsi

Host encrypted video conferences directly in your browser, deploy on your own servers, or integrate into applications - all with this powerful open source platform.

6 sources 28,903 stars Self-hosted Apache-2.0

Product snapshot

How the interface presents itself

Jitsi interface screenshot

Positioning

What this project is really offering

The goal here is to separate raw catalog facts from the sharper product shape users care about before they commit time.

About

Jitsi Meet is a versatile platform offering secure‚ user-friendly‚ and scalable video conferencing solutions. It can be utilized either as a standalone application or seamlessly integrated into your web application. With its emphasis on security and simplicity‚ Jitsi Meet ensures that users can engage in high-quality video conferences without compromising their privacy or data security. Whether you're hosting a small team meeting or a large-scale webinar‚ Jitsi Meet provides the flexibility and reliability needed to facilitate seamless communication and collaboration. Its intuitive interface and robust features make it easy for users to initiate‚ join‚ and manage video conferences‚ fostering effective communication and collaboration among participants. From instant messaging to screen sharing‚ Jitsi Meet offers a comprehensive suite of tools designed to enhance productivity and streamline remote collaboration.

Why it stands out

Jitsi Meet is an open source alternative to Zoom, Google Meet. Licensed under Apache-2.0, it gives you full access to the source code and the freedom to modify, self-host, and contribute. You can deploy it on your own servers for complete data ownership and privacy.

Highlights

The capabilities most worth remembering

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Instant browser-based meetings

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Self-hosting capability

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Developer-friendly APIs

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Support for large conferences

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Cross-platform compatibility

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Secure

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Simple

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Scalable

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Embed-Friendly

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Open Source

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Cross-Platform

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No account required to join

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End-to-end encryption

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Screen sharing & recording

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Breakout rooms

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Live streaming to YouTube

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Chat and reactions

Evidence

What backs up the editorial summary