ADA Compliance for Video, Webinars, and Live Streams
Organizations that deliver webinars, live events, and online video need accessibility measures that work in production and stand up to scrutiny. Streaming Compliance is an upstream layer that processes streams before distribution, adding real-time transcription, translation, sign-language-oriented delivery support, and records you can reference when stakeholders ask how accessibility was provided.
Operational reliability, not checkbox features
ADA-related expectations for digital video often come down to whether captions and related accommodations are accurate, timely, and available when audiences need them. That depends on how streams are processed, not only on what a hosting dashboard claims. Streaming Compliance sits in the pipeline ahead of players and distribution endpoints, so accessibility processing is part of the same operational path as your encode and delivery workflow.
Why downstream platform features are often insufficient
Many video platforms offer built-in captioning or third-party integrations. Those options can help for simple use cases, but they tie accessibility to a single vendor’s timeline, quality controls, and logging model. When you run webinars and live streams across more than one platform, or when legal and accessibility teams ask how captions were produced and verified, platform-native features rarely give you a single, consistent compliance layer or a clear record of what happened in each session. An upstream service applies the same processing logic regardless of where the stream is headed, and keeps evidence aligned with your workflow instead of scattered across consoles.
Auditability and evidence
Defensible accessibility practice requires more than turning on a toggle. Teams need timestamped signals that captions and related outputs were generated and delivered in line with internal standards. Streaming Compliance is built to produce operational records and session-level traceability so you can show what ran, when, and in what context—not a marketing claim about compliance, but evidence tied to production traffic.
How Streaming Compliance fits
The product does not replace your video platform or player. It processes audio and video upstream, supports transcription and translation workflows, and includes capabilities for sign-language-related metadata and delivery paths appropriate to enterprise pipelines. Your existing distribution stack and player technology stay in place; the compliance layer injects processing and documentation at the point where it can still affect the stream reliably.
Discuss your workflow
If you need an upstream compliance layer for webinars, on-demand video, and live streams, contact us to review architecture, deployment options, and evidence requirements. Request a conversation through our contact page or email contact@streamingcompliance.com.