
Last week I attended the RTC.ON 2025 conference in Krakow, Poland, alongside my colleagues Alberto González Trastoy and Alfred González Trastoy from our WebRTC.ventures team. The conference is in its third year, and this was my second time attending. RTC.ON has quickly become one of the premier

Enterprise video SDK integrations frequently expose critical security vulnerabilities. Client-side secrets, unvalidated webhooks, and bypassed authentication layers create attack vectors that persist in production systems. These implementations typically function correctly during development, but fail security audits and present significant risks in enterprise environments. We’ve built a real-time

When WebRTC was first introduced by Google over a decade ago, it came with the promise of simplicity. “Just drop in a little JavaScript and you’ve got video chat in the browser with no downloads necessary!” While that vision helped kickstart a wave of innovation in real-time

Voice assistants powered by real-time AI are increasingly being used to automate phone-based customer interactions. Whether for contact centers, internal help desks, or voice-driven workflows, a reliable architecture needs to support low-latency audio streaming, accurate speech-to-text (STT), intelligent response generation, and real-time speech synthesis. In this post,