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Cake day: June 30th, 2023

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  • I worked on lots of very large Zoom meetings. After you subscribe to the product, it’s your own responsibility to use the tools provided to moderate incoming users. Zoombombing is only possible with very poorly moderated or unmoderated Zoom meetings. They would have to do several things wrong, and here are some of them:

    1. Not requiring a password to join the meeting
    2. Including the password in the link to join the meeting.
    3. Not setting admin/moderator permissions, allowing any user to take them
    4. Not differentiating the meeting room from the default room.
    5. Distributing the wrong Zoom link, there can be one for attendees and a different one intended for spectators, who should not have audio/video broadcast permissions.

    That’s not all of them, but if this group improperly handles their Zoom setup, the company isn’t responsible because they already provided the security tools and the documentation to use them. At least, that’s my humble understanding.