In November 2025, Italian software group Bending Spoons acquired Vimeo in an all-cash deal valued at approximately $1.38 billion. Just months later, in February 2026, Vimeo confirmed sweeping global layoffs that former employees said impacted a significant portion of the company, including core video and engineering teams. This followed an earlier workforce reduction in September 2025 that had already cut roughly 10 percent of staff. For businesses running paid courses, education platforms, SaaS products with embedded video, or OTT-style subscription services, this is more than a routine acquisition story. In an era increasingly powered by AI-driven content delivery, automated video indexing, smart compression, and personalized streaming experiences, video hosting platforms are no longer passive infrastructure. They are intelligent systems that directly influence performance, discoverability, engagement, and revenue. When ownership changes and AI strategies shift, the ripple effects can reshape reliability, pricing models, and product direction—making proactive migration planning a strategic necessity rather than a reactive scramble. When ownership changes and most of the people who built and maintained that infrastructure are suddenly gone, it raises real questions about reliability, roadmap, and long-term platform risk. Right now, Vimeo is still online, your existing library is still reachable, and there has been
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