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]] Here are some recommended best practices for keeping your Zoom 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 Zoom meetings secure.
  
 
|content=
 
|content=
  
 +
===Start Here To Protect Your Zoom Meetings===
 +
# Use a unique Zoom Room ID
 +
# Only share your room ID with the participants you want to attend - do not publish this ID public websites or distributing broadly via email DLs.
 +
 +
 +
===Additional Resources===
 +
See [https://zoom.us/security Zoom's Security page] for additional information on Zoom's security features.
  
  
===Getting Started===
 
See [https://zoom.us/security Zoom's Security page] for additional information.
 
  
  

Revision as of 14:57, 31 March 2020

Zoom-logo.png
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 Zoom meetings secure.

Start Here To Protect Your Zoom Meetings

  1. Use a unique Zoom Room ID
  2. Only share your room ID with the participants you want to attend - do not publish this ID public websites or distributing broadly via email DLs.


Additional Resources

See Zoom's Security page for additional information on Zoom's security features.




Keywords: web conferencing