Last month Techcrunch reported that Mozilla had gone “full incubator” by holding a startup lab called Fix the Internet, followed by “a formal program dangling $75,000 investments in front of early-stage companies…”

Fix the Internet had many key themes, including collaboration and decentralization (as well as user-controlled data and privacy-protecting social networks). That event “drew the interest of some 1,500 people in 520 projects, and 25 were chosen to receive the full package and stipend during the development of their minimum viable product (MVP). Below that, as far as pecuniary commitment goes, is the ‘MVP Lab,’ similar to the spring program but offering a total of $16,000 per team.”
And one of those MVP Lab teams is Meething, a new video conferencing and collaboration platform from the innovation lab ERA. Meething “aims to be more secure than existing video conferencing tools and run on a decentralized database engine and leverage peer-to-peer networking” according to ZDNet.
In their video interview with CEO Mark Nadal, he outlined the following selling points:
Browser based video conferencing gives customers better options for security as well as branding.Open source architecture is a win and the peer-to-peer networking is more efficient on compute costs.Meething doesn’t require downloads or apps that increase the security attack surface.

The total addressable market for video conferencing is large and can support multiple players.

Their press release quotes Mark Mayo, a former Chief Product Officer at Mozilla who served as Meething’s mentor, arguing that video conferencing on the web “has long promised to enable a whole new world of online collaboration. Frankly, it hasn’t delivered. It’s been way too hard to build cool products with video and Meething aims to be the zero-barrier-to-entry platform that realizes this future. Soon, video conferencing won’t suck!”

of this story at Slashdot.

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Source:: Slashdot