By Cameron Abbott, Warwick Andersen, Rob Pulham and Max Evans
As the world grinds to a halt following the perpetuation of COVID-19, more and more businesses have turned to remote work arrangements. This has led to a sharp rise in the use of videoconferencing technology Zoom. However, as the Australian Financial Review notes, flawed data security and privacy practices mean that the use of Zoom could be disastrous for corporate and personal privacy.
Concerns surrounding the use of
Zoom arose earlier this year, with critical security vulnerabilities enabling hackers
to predict Meeting ID’s and therefore join active meetings, and also
allowing any website to forcibly
join a user to a Zoom call with their video camera activated and without
the user’s permission. Whilst a number of these errors were patched up, as the
article notes, Zoom refused to disable the ability for hackers to forcibly join
to a call anyone visiting a malicious site, raising security red flags and
undermining public confidence in Zoom’s attitude towards data security. A
strange response given that part of its attraction had been a perceived
stronger approach to security.
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