Zoom Security - Best Practices for Scheduling Meetings
From Help Wiki
Zoom-bombing is a recent phenomenon that refers to bad actors dropping in and disrupting Zoom meetings. Here are some recommended best practices for keeping your meetings secure.
Protecting your meetings happen when you are initially scheduling the meeting. You can also set default meeting behaviors in your profile so that every future meeting you create inherits those settings.
Protect Your Zoom Meetings
- Use a unique Zoom Room ID
- It can be tempting to create a room ID once and then re-use over again as if it were a persistent space. Be aware that the longer you use a Room ID the great the chance it gets discovered.
- Only share your room ID with the participants you want to attend
- Do not publish your room IDs on public websites or distribute broadly via email DLs.
- Protect your Personal Meeting ID (PMI)
- This is a persistent Room connected to your account. Use it for one-on-one meetings, office hours, etc. but be careful how broadly you distribute it.
- Create a Waiting Room for Attendees
- Make Sure Only the Hosts Can Share Their Screen
- This is a global default.
- Lock a Meeting Once It Starts
- Once all of your participants have arrived, navigate to the Participants window and choose More > Lock Meeting
- Remove or Put a Participant on Hold
- Sometimes an unexpected participant manages to slip through. As the meeting host, you do have the ability to kick someone out of a meeting or put them on hold.
Our Global Meeting Defaults
The following default settings have been enabled. All other settings are Off by default. You can change any of these settings in your Personal meeting Settings.
- Embed password in meeting link for one-click join
- Chat
- Private Chat
- Co-host - Allow the host to add co-hosts. Co-hosts have the same in-meeting controls as the host.
- Polling - Add 'Polls' to the meeting controls.
- Screen sharing - Only Hosts can screen share
- Annotation
- Whiteboard
- Remote control
- Nonverbal feedback
- Virtual background
Additional Resources
See Zoom's Security page for additional information on Zoom's security features.
Keywords: web conferencing