Zoom Rolls Out End-to-End Encryption For Both Free, Paid Users


San Francisco: Video meeting app Zoom has made its new end-to-end encryption (E2EE) feature available to users globally, free and paid, for meetings with up to 200 participants. Also Read – Oops! Philippines Government Official Caught Having Sex With Secretary During Zoom Meeting, To Get Fired

This optional feature is available immediately as a technical preview, meaning that the company is proactively soliciting feedback from users for the next 30 days, Zoom said on Monday. Also Read – Plea Moved in Supreme Court to Ban Zoom App After Complaints on Privacy Breach, Security Issues

“We’re very proud to bring Zoom’s new end-to-end encryption to Zoom users globally today,” said Zoom Chief Information Security Officer (CISO) Jason Lee. Also Read – Centre Plans on ‘Desi’ Version of Video Conferencing After Ministry of Home Affairs Pointed Zoom App is ‘Not Safe’

“This has been a highly requested feature from our customers, and we’re excited to make this a reality.”

The highly sought security feature is available on Zoom desktop client version 5.4.0 for Mac and PC, the Zoom Android app, and Zoom Rooms, with the Zoom iOS app pending Apple App Store approval.

When users enable E2EE for their meetings, nobody except each participant — not even Zoom’s meeting servers — has access to the encryption keys that are used to encrypt the meeting, the US-based company said.

Account admins can enable this feature in their web dashboard at the account, group, and user level.

It can also be locked at the account or group level. If enabled, the host can toggle on and off end-to-end encryption for any given meeting depending on the level of security and level of functionality they would like.

In phase one, meeting participants must join from the Zoom desktop client, mobile app, or Zoom Rooms for end-to-end encryption-enabled meetings.

Zoom first announced its plans to build an end-to-end-encrypted meeting option into its platform in May.

The US-based company had said that since releasing the draft design of the platform’s end-to-end encryption on May 22, it has engaged with civil liberties organisations, child safety advocates, encryption experts, government representatives, its own users, and others to gather their feedback on this feature.

Zoom was earlier sued by one of its shareholders who alleged in the complaint that the platform failed to disclose some vulnerabilities and that the services did not provide end-to-end encryption.

As a technical preview, Zoom hopes to gather input from customers on their experiences with end-to-end encryption.


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