Teleconferencing Company Zoom Pitching End-To-End Encryption That Really Isn't End-To-End

Teleconferencing Company Zoom Pitching End-To-End Encryption That Really Isn't End-To-End

4 years ago
Anonymous $9CO2RSACsf

https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20200401/15462444216/teleconferencing-company-zoom-pitching-end-to-end-encryption-that-really-isnt-end-to-end.shtml

As Karl Bode wrote what feels like a decade ago on March 19, 2020, privacy and encryption will be more important than ever during this pandemic and the future that succeeds it. Plenty of governments have been sacrificing citizens' privacy for better virus tracking and plenty of governments were already throwing shade at encryption well before the pandemic became a pandemic. That includes our government, which has been agitating against encryption for several years now and fighting against our privacy in federal courts for decades.

An influx of remote workers makes encryption and privacy even more important, as there's plenty of sensitive company business being done over open networks with minimal protections. The beneficiaries of this new normal are responding quickly to the unexpected demand, but protection of work-at-home employees and their employers seems to have been forgotten.

Teleconferencing Company Zoom Pitching End-To-End Encryption That Really Isn't End-To-End

Apr 2, 2020, 11:26am UTC
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20200401/15462444216/teleconferencing-company-zoom-pitching-end-to-end-encryption-that-really-isnt-end-to-end.shtml > As Karl Bode wrote what feels like a decade ago on March 19, 2020, privacy and encryption will be more important than ever during this pandemic and the future that succeeds it. Plenty of governments have been sacrificing citizens' privacy for better virus tracking and plenty of governments were already throwing shade at encryption well before the pandemic became a pandemic. That includes our government, which has been agitating against encryption for several years now and fighting against our privacy in federal courts for decades. > An influx of remote workers makes encryption and privacy even more important, as there's plenty of sensitive company business being done over open networks with minimal protections. The beneficiaries of this new normal are responding quickly to the unexpected demand, but protection of work-at-home employees and their employers seems to have been forgotten.