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Taiwan Bans Zoom Amid Mounting Security Concerns

Taiwan Bans Zoom Amid Mounting Security Concerns

Taiwan’s government has banned all official use of video conferencing service Zoom amid mounting security concerns, marking the first time聽a government has imposed a formal action against the company.

In聽a statement聽published April 7, the Taiwanese government’s executive branch said that “If agencies must hold remote videoconferencing for business needs, they should not use products with security concerns such as Zoom,” and that “non-Chinese video software must be used.”

“At present, all major international information service providers provide free software during the epidemic, such as Google or Microsoft. Under the security risk assessment, [these] can be considered for use,” it continued.

Zoom’s popularity has skyrocketed in recent weeks as strict social distancing measures and stay-at-home orders have been rolled out in nations across the globe. Governments,聽businesses, and even schools have been forced to work from home amid the CCP (Chinese Communist Party)聽virus pandemic and have utilized the video conferencing service to maintain communication.

A statement published by Zoom’s CEO Eric Yuan on April 1 said the company, which is headquartered in聽San Jose, California, has seen its daily user base grow from聽10 million in December last year to more than 200 million last month, including聽over 90,000 schools across 20 countries, adding that it had far surpassed their initial expectations.

However, Zoom has also come under scrutiny in recent months due to a range of security and privacy concerns and聽after the CEO admitted its encryption keys were being transmitted to servers in聽China聽in some cases.聽More recently, Zoom鈥檚 privacy and security features are being carefully examined after hackers exploited a screen-sharing feature by hijacking meetings and online classrooms with messages in an emerging phenomenon known as “zoom-bombing.”

Yuan has since apologized for mistakenly routing calls via China, explaining that it had occurred because the company had been dealing with a “massive increase” in demand. The CEO said the company has since corrected this and has stopped using that capacity as backup for non-Chinese clients. “We have also been working on improving our encryption and will be working with experts to ensure we are following best practices,” he added, but did not say how many users had been affected by the issue.

As China聽refuses to acknowledge Taiwan as an independent state鈥攄espite the self-ruled island having its own currency, military, and democratically-elected government鈥攐fficial data being relayed through China could be considered a privacy threat for the nation.

Shortly after Taiwan’s announcement banning the video conferencing service, the聽German foreign ministry also restricted the use of Zoom on Wednesday,聽due to the lack of adequate encryption and “critical” weaknesses in the software,聽according to聽German newspaper Handelsblatt.

In the United States a number of schools聽have banned the use of Zoom for remote classes and switched to聽Microsoft Teams.聽New York City Attorney General Letitia James has also initiated investigations into Zoom over privacy and data security practices, while in California one of its shareholders聽has filed a lawsuit against the company accusing it of聽overstating its privacy standards and failing to disclose that its service was not end-to-end encrypted.

The shareholder, Michael Drieu, claimed in a court filing that a string of recent media reports highlighting the privacy flaws in Zoom鈥檚 application have led to the company鈥檚 stock to plummet.

More recently,聽Elon Musk鈥檚 SpaceX banned employees from using the software because of “significant privacy and security concerns,” while space agency NASA has done the same. Earlier this week, Google also banned聽the use of Zoom on employee computers as it “does not meet security standards.”

Janita Kan contributed to this report.

This article is from the Internet:Taiwan Bans Zoom Amid Mounting Security Concerns