Skip to main content

Ex-Facebook Live manager launches live-streaming app with a focus on the personal

alively live streaming app
If you like the idea of live-streaming but are put off by the public exposure that comes with posting your broadcasts to massive social networks, Alively could be the app for you.

Created by former Facebook Live manager Vadim Lavrusik, the new app for iOS offers an intimate sharing experience in the vein of Snapchat, with an emphasis on live-streams.

Once you download Alively, you can pick and choose who to alert about your real-time broadcasts by syncing the app to your contacts list. If you forget to add someone, you can simply select to notify them during the live-stream itself.

The app also limits the interactions you can receive from viewers to just comments — no hearts and likes here. All your footage is saved to the app’s servers in the cloud in order to save precious storage space on your smartphone. The company claims that it offers high-quality live-streams due to a 30-second delay in the broadcast, which ensures viewers receive a clear image. Additionally, the contacts you select to have tune in to your clip don’t even need to have the app installed to start watching. Your intended viewers can be sent videos via SMS that will automatically play within their messaging platform in their original quality.

Alively is all about keeping broadcasts personal
Alively is all about keeping broadcasts personal

Alively is backed by a wealth of talent, including the aforementioned Lavrusik, and the co-founders of Upfront Media Group, Ray Lee and Vincent Tuscano. The company has already secured $800,000 in seed funding from venture capital firms including SV Angel and Greylock Partners.

“We want to make it easy and fun to capture and share those everyday moments as they happen with friends,” the company said in a statement. “Real moments that go beyond the highlight reel. Moments that people in our lives wouldn’t want to miss. Shared moments, in real time. We think the best way to do that is through high-quality, privately shared live video, so friends can share and experience that moment with you as if they’re there.”

Having worked on Facebook’s live-streaming behemoth, Lavrusik knows a thing or two about the format. Unlike his time at the social network — which saw him lead Facebook’s rollout of the exclusive Mentions streaming app for celebs and influencers — Lavrusik is now pursuing what he calls “narrowcasting.”

“I learned a ton from working on Facebook Live about what motivates people to not only share live, but also watch live,” Lavrusik told VentureBeat. “But the thing we’re really focused on is creating a good experience for … sharing live or recorded video to just a few people.”

Alively is available to download for free on iOS right now in the U.S.

Saqib Shah
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Saqib Shah is a Twitter addict and film fan with an obsessive interest in pop culture trends. In his spare time he can be…
What is the Temu app? Here’s everything you need to know
Temu logo on an iPhone.

Following an increased marketing push starting in 2023, the Temu app has started to pick up some solid momentum that's driven many shoppers to want to check it out. As new marketplaces start to make their way into the mainstream, however, there's usually a healthy amount of skepticism toward them.

Although it's always a good impulse to be cautious about putting sensitive information into any app, here's everything you need to know about Temu — and if you truly need to be careful.
What is Temu?

Read more
Our 5 favorite iPhone and Android apps by Black developers
An iPhone with apps from Black developers downloaded on it.

As we wrap up the celebration of 2023's Black History Month, it remains important to recognize and appreciate the contributions that Black people have made in various fields, including technology and the smartphone apps we use every day. From social media platforms to productivity tools, Black developers and other people of color have worked hard to create innovative, useful, and just plain fun apps.

Here, we're focusing on five helpful apps developed by Black people that you should check out. These iPhone and Android apps range from ones that help you discover and support Black-owned businesses to ones that provide legal assistance in case of an emergency to ones that curate and highlight sources of news and entertainment by Black creators.
We Read Too

Read more
SMS 2FA is insecure and bad — use these 5 great authenticator apps instead
Twilio Authy 2FA app running on an iPhone.

You probably have what seems like a million accounts across the internet these days, right? At least, that’s what it feels like for me — with all these social media, email, and banking accounts, plus digital storefronts, and more. Regardless of where I access these from, whether it’s my iPhone 14 Pro or my Samsung Galaxy S23 Plus, or even my Mac, the first step is to make sure that I have a strong and secure (preferably randomly generated) password. But for extra peace of mind, everyone needs to look into two-factor authentication (2FA) to really keep people out.

Recently, Twitter has made the news yet again because it’s forcing everyone who uses SMS 2FA to either remove it from their account or subscribe to Twitter Blue to keep it. SMS 2FA is when you get a code sent as an SMS to your phone, and while it's convenient, this is the least secure 2FA method available. SMS 2FA is susceptible to numerous vulnerabilities, including SIM swapping (where someone takes over a mobile phone number by convincing a carrier to link that number with the SIM card), SIM duplication attacks, and more.

Read more