> For those who want additional control of their keys, an on-premise solution exists today for the entire meeting infrastructure, and a solution will be available later this year to allow organizations to leverage Zoom’s cloud infrastructure but host the key management system within their environment. Additionally, enterprise customers have the option to run certain versions of our connectors within their own data centers if they would like to manage the decryption and translation process themselves.

So... privacy is a premium feature requiring you to self-host? Why not just run jitsi for free?

Doesn't Jitsi have the same problem? The solution is the same: Run your own server. End to end encrypted videoconferencing does not scale easily without a server.

> Is Jitsi Meet end-to-end encrypted? #409

> ... "yes, https://meet.jit.si/ encrypts the communication, only the two clients and our server has access to them". ... [1]

[1]: https://github.com/jitsi/jitsi-meet/issues/409

Yes... but in one case the software is entirely FOSS and readily deployable via a docker image. The Zoom server is not FOSS, or even accessible through their GitHub.

https://github.com/jitsi/docker-jitsi-meet