Hey,Horror Movies | Adult Movies Online would you look at that: A company is actually facing consequences for its actions.
The Federal Trade Commission said Monday that it has finalized a settlement with Zoom. At issue was the company allegedly misleading its users about the privacy and security of its core product.
Monday's announcement comes almost three months after Zoom agreed to the settlement terms, and marks the beginning — not the end — of an ongoing commitment to improve the security of its videoconferencing software.
"The final order requires Zoom to implement a comprehensive security program, review any software updates for security flaws prior to release and ensure the updates will not hamper third-party security features," explains the FTC announcement. "The company must also obtain biennial assessments of its security program by an independent third party, which the FTC has authority to approve, and notify the Commission if it experiences a data breach."
Zoom's rise to household name dovetailed with the devastating coronavirus pandemic. The company's problems soon followed.
In late March, the Intercept reported that, despite suggesting the contrary, Zoom meetings were not end-to-end encrypted. Other privacy and security concerns followed. It was the encryption issue, however, that appears to have landed Zoom in the most trouble.
"Zoom's security practices didn't line up with its promises, and this action will help to make sure that Zoom meetings and data about Zoom users are protected," Andrew Smith, the director of the FTC's Bureau of Consumer Protection, said in a November press release when the settlement was first announced.
SEE ALSO: Zoom employee secretly censored users on behalf of China, alleges DOJ
Zoom neither admitted nor denied the FTC's claims. According to FTC spokesperson Juliana Gruenwald, "[if] Zoom violates the order, the FTC could seek monetary penalties as well as other relief."
Such action by the FTC wouldn't be unprecedented. In 2019, Facebook was hit with a $5 billion fine after it violated a 2011 settlement with the FTC.
Notably, Zoom has since added end-to-end encryption to its product, but you have to manually turn it on yourself.
UPDATE: Feb. 1, 2021, 2:11 p.m. PST: This story was updated to include comment from an FTC spokesperson.
Topics Cybersecurity Privacy
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
Then and Now: 6 Generations of GeForce Graphics Compared
What Wells Fargo’s $185 million settlement may mean for you
What Wells Fargo’s $185 million settlement may mean for you
Pokémon Go's smart Plus accessory goes on sale next Friday
Pairing CPUs and GPUs: PC Upgrades and Bottlenecking
Nearly everyone seems appalled by Matt Lauer's presidential forum performance
Graphic sexual assault photo series forces you to see the victim
Elon Musk asks for everyone's help to solve Falcon explosion mystery
Netherlands vs. Spain 2025 livestream: Watch UEFA Nations League for free
An early look at comedy icon Cedric the Entertainer's new Netflix special
Ryzen 5 1600X vs. 1600: Which should you buy?
Mastercard sued for $19 billion in UK's biggest ever damages claim
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。