
Big Blue Marble brings broadcast-grade OTT streaming to IBC2025
Big Blue Marble, the newly launched international media technology brand formed by ORS Group and Insys Video Technologies, will make its public debut at IBC2025 (booths 5.H97/H99) with a showcase of its unified suite of video streaming solutions. Combining broadcast-grade resilience with cloud-native flexibility, Big Blue Marble enables broadcasters, telcos, cultural institutions, sports clubs, and content publishers to quickly launch secure and scalable video services without the overhead of building from scratch.
Modular Media Solutions Designed for Scale
“We built Big Blue Marble to fill a critical gap in the market: video streaming solutions that meet the standards of true broadcast quality,” said Michael Wagenhofer, CEO of ORS Group. “That means unmatched reliability, future-ready scalability, robust content protection and uncompromised video quality. At IBC2025, we’re introducing more than a brand; we’re offering a new pathway for organizations to scale video with confidence, powered by solutions engineered for transformation.”
Big Blue Marble – launched in July 2025 following years of joint development – offers a modular suite of cloud-native tools and services designed to scale alongside customers. While continuing to deliver terrestrial, satellite and cable TV services in the DACH region, the company is expanding its streaming offerings for international markets. Its IBC2025 showcase will include
- InsysGO:
A scalable cloud-based video streaming platform that enables customers to launch fully featured video services with speed and control. It supports live TV, video-on-demand, catch-up television, and network-based personal video recording. With an integrated content management system, customizable UX/UI design and support for subscription, ad-supported, transactional and pay-per-view, it enables TV services to be launched in a matter of weeks.
- Austrostream:
A managed TV-as-a-Service platform designed to help cable operators launch their online streaming platform without heavy upfront costs. The service includes white-label branding, a set-top box with custom branding, and support with storefront and content rights management.
- Cloud Video Kit:
A flexible suite of cloud-based tools that simplify both live and on-demand workflows. The solution handles transcoding, packaging, security, and playback, whether for real-time broadcasting or archived VOD libraries. It also supports live-to-VOD recording, server-side ad insertion, and delivers viewer analytics through integrated dashboards. Its architecture supports global multi-device playback and ultra-low latency distribution.
- Cloud DRM:
Multi-DRM content protection, supporting major standards including Apple FairPlay, Microsoft PlayReady, and Google Widevine. As AWS Qualified Software, it meets the highest benchmarks for reliability and compliance. It also integrates seamlessly with other advanced content security services: geo-restriction tools, password-sharing prevention, and AI-powered forensic watermarking.
- Professional Services:
End-to-end consulting and support from a team of AWS-certified engineers and streaming specialists, including cloud migration, multi-CDN strategies, OTT headend setup, live cloud production and integration with third-party technologies.
“In today’s dynamic and competitive media market, launching a streaming service needs to happen in weeks, not months,” said Krzysztof Bartkowski, CEO of Insys Video Technologies. “With Big Blue Marble, customers gain access to innovation grounded in real-world needs, delivered through modular tools that let them launch fast, scale flexibly, and stay in control. Whether it’s a sports league monetizing live games, a regional broadcaster modernizing distribution, or cultural and religious institutions reaching global audiences, we remove complexity without locking them into rigid systems.”
Visitors to booths 5.H97/H99 will also experience Big Blue Marble’s real-world deployment of 5G Broadcast which enables linear TV streaming to mobile devices over terrestrial networks. Combined with sub-second latency, these technologies offer a window into the future of live video delivery across sports, culture, and public service broadcasting.