Difference between revisions of "Zoom Security - Best Practices for Scheduling Meetings"
From Help Wiki
m |
m |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{TwoColumn|lead= | {{TwoColumn|lead= | ||
− | [[Image:Zoom-logo.png|left|40px]] 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. | + | [[Image:Zoom-logo.png|left|40px]] '''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. |
|content= | |content= | ||
− | === | + | ===Protect Your Zoom Meetings=== |
# '''Use a unique Zoom Room ID''' | # '''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. | #: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. |
Revision as of 16:31, 31 March 2020
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.
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- Only share your room ID with the participants you want to attend - do not publish this ID public websites or distributing broadly via email DLs.
- explain here with link
- Protect your Personal Meeting ID (PMI)
- explain here with link
- Create a Waiting Room
- explain here with link
Additional Resources
See Zoom's Security page for additional information on Zoom's security features.
Keywords: web conferencing