

When you start your meeting, you’ll notice you now have a LinkedIn icon along the top rail. There is a good guide from LinkedIn on running Live Events here. For example, you must have your account in Creator mode.
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LinkedIn also has some rules around who can host Live Events. In the desktop app, you can also open the meeting you have already created and click on the + icon to add an app to the meeting. Adding an App to Microsoft Teams Adding the LinkedIn app to a Meeting Searching for a meeting to add the LinkedIn App to Save and add this App to the Meeting Full docs from Microsoft here on the policy. The other condition is that you must invite another presenter and allow registrations for the webinar. You can use a web browser version of Teams to do this, but when hosting the meeting/streaming, you must use the desktop app on Windows or Mac. Once enabled in your tenant, you can head to your Microsoft Teams desktop app and add the App to a meeting. Adding the LinkedIn app to Microsoft Teams meetings According to Message Center ID MC268726, roll out should be completed by mid-February 2022 for standard and government tenants. There is another small caveat, it may not be in your tenant just yet. Set-CsTeamsMeetingPolicy -LiveStreamingMode Enabled Get-CsTeamsMeetingPolicy -Identity Global Once you set it to Enabled, wait the obligatory 24 hours or so to replicate.

As you will see below, there is one called LiveSteamingMode and it is set to Disabled by default. However, there is a Teams Meeting policy flag that must be enabled via PowerShell first. Allowing users to Live Stream from Microsoft Teams

This means users can stream out their Teams meetings to platforms such as LinkedIn Live, YouTube etc. In summary, Microsoft Teams will allow RTMP streaming. With this getting rolled out to everyone, there are some things that must be done first.
