MoQ: Refactoring the Internet’s Real-Time Media Stack (Because Apparently We’ve Learned Nothing)
Welcome to the Internet’s Messy Garage Sale Picture this: the Internet’s media stack is basically your uncle’s garage. Over in the corner, you’ve got an old RTMP bike frame that nobody rides anymore, leaning against a busted HLS lawnmower, while DASH is just sitting there, rusting, and WebRTC is duct-taped to a random car engine like some Frankenstein monster project. For two decades, we’ve been “solving” problems by just slapping protocols together like mismatched IKEA furniture. Streaming engineers have been like, “Oh, you want scale? Here, have HLS. You want low latency? That’ll be WebRTC. You want complexity so bad you’ll age 10 years just trying to debug it? Congratulations, you’ve already got all three.” Now Cloudflare swoops in on August 22, 2025, shouting: “We’ve got MoQ—Media over QUIC—the Marie Kondo of Internet protocols! It sparks joy AND maybe won’t make you cry blood when trying to stream a live auction.” Spoiler: this is less about joy and more about “finally cleanin...