Company snapshot

CategoryHiberniaPeer5
Statusdefunctdefunct
Founded
Headquarters
Website
Docs

Overview

Hibernia Networks, formerly Hibernia Atlantic, was a US-based provider of global telecommunications and CDN services, operating subsea and terrestrial fiber networks. It served financial markets, media, and telecom providers with low-latency connectivity, including the Hibernia Express transatlantic cable. Acquired by GTT Communications in January 2017, its CDN services, including HiberniaCDN, are no longer independently offered, and the brand is defunct.
Peer5 operated a peer-to-peer (P2P) content delivery network (CDN) specializing in live video streaming, leveraging WebRTC for in-browser, clientless enterprise CDN (eCDN) solutions. Founded in 2012, the company was acquired by Microsoft in August 2021 to enhance video streaming capabilities in Microsoft Teams. Peer5’s technology optimized bandwidth usage through self-balancing mesh networks, serving large-scale enterprise events with up to 2 million concurrent users. As of 2025, Peer5’s standalone services are defunct, with its technology integrated into Microsoft’s eCDN for Teams.

Network & Architecture

Feature comparison

FeatureHiberniaPeer5
waf
bot_mitigation
ddos
rate_limit
http3_quic
tls13
tiered_cache
origin_shield
instant_purge
stale_while_revalidate
stale_if_error
image_optimization
video_vod
video_live
drm
hls_dash_packaging
websockets
signed_urls
edge_compute
functions
kv_storage
api_first
realtime_logs
log_push
terraform

Legend: ✓ = Supported, ✗ = Not supported, — = Not listed

Pricing

Integrations & DevEx

When it fits

When it doesn’t

History & Notes

Hibernia Networks operated a global network across North America, Europe, and Asia, with key cable landing stations in Canada, the US, Ireland, and the UK. Its Hibernia Express cable was notable for sub-59ms latency between New York and London, targeting financial and media sectors. After the 2017 acquisition by GTT Communications, Hibernia’s infrastructure was absorbed, and no public documentation indicates a revival of its CDN services. A 2019 subsea cable cut led to a legal dispute with a customer, highlighting operational challenges pre-acquisition.
Peer5 was known for its innovative use of WebRTC to create a decentralized, browser-based P2P CDN, reducing server load and improving video delivery for large audiences. The company powered events for over 1 billion users before its acquisition. No official EOL announcement for standalone services was found, but Peer5’s website now redirects to Microsoft’s eCDN page, indicating full integration. Some third-party sources mention continued support for existing Peer5 customers post-acquisition, but this is unconfirmed as of 2025.