Five Ways to Keep Hackers Out of Your Zoom Meetings

The new normal as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic which has forced people from all over the world to embrace remote working  has seen billions of people working from home, which means video conferencing apps have exploded in popularity. At the forefront is the service Zoom. However, with Zoom’s explosive popularity came a series of highly publicized security issues. According to Gabe Goldhirsh, Vice President, MEA at digital risk protection company, ZeroFOX, Zoom administrators are responsible for establishing security parameters that affect internal employees as well as any external parties that may join the organization’s Zoom meetings. To keep hackers off your Zoom meetings, Goldhirsh suggests the following five steps to take:

Zoom Meeting
Zoom Meeting

Enable password requirements for all remote meetings whenever possible within the tool. Password enforcement at the administrative level is a primary requirement for risk mitigation and protection of the business.

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Do NOT allow proactive entry of a meeting by participants.

Use Administrator locks at an organization level to prevent user changes.

Utilize notification capabilities within the app for your organization to proactively identify potential malicious activity.

Require user authentication when utilizing Web clients and allowing users to join meetings from outside the application.

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The future of meetings and virtual group hangouts going in 2021

Despite progress toward pandemic control, Goldhirsh believes remote work is here to stay.  Most likely, organisations will adopt hybrid work models (some time spent remote, some time in office) that will challenge security teams to ‘control’ the fluid work environment. This will further increase cloud/SaaS adoption, allowing attackers to have near equal access to employees, customers and stakeholders.

Kelechi Deca

Kelechi Deca has over two decades of media experience, he has traveled to over 77 countries reporting on multilateral development institutions, international business, trade, travels, culture, and diplomacy. He is also a petrol head with in-depth knowledge of automobiles and the auto industry