الاثنين، 2 أغسطس 2021

Zoom reaches a $85 million settlement in the Zumbing lawsuit

 


Zoom agreed to pay $85 million to resolve the lawsuit, alleging that the video conferencing giant violated user privacy by providing data to a third party without permission and resolving the zombie incident. Outbreak due to the pandemic, it described unauthorized assistants entering and suspending Zoom calls by sharing offensive pictures, using hate messages, or speaking insults and profanity.

 , Also accused the company of passing users’ personal data to third parties, including Facebook, Google and LinkedIn. In addition to the $85 million dispute resolution agreement, if the lawsuit obtains class action status, customers can get a 15% refund of the $25 subscription, and Zoom said it will take additional measures to prevent intruders.

 Let users know when the meeting organizer or other attendees use third-party applications in the meeting, and provide employees with specific training on data protection and data processing. "User privacy and security are Zoom's top priorities, and we attach great importance to the trust that users place in us," Zoom said in a statement.

 We are proud of what we have achieved on the platform and look forward to further innovation, with a focus on privacy and security. The agreement requires the approval of the U.S. District Judge Lucy Koch in San Jose, California to complete.

 


Zoom agreed to pay $85 million to resolve the lawsuit, alleging that the video conferencing giant violated user privacy by providing data to a third party without permission and resolving the zombie incident. Outbreak due to the pandemic, it described unauthorized assistants entering and suspending Zoom calls by sharing offensive pictures, using hate messages, or speaking insults and profanity.

 , Also accused the company of passing users’ personal data to third parties, including Facebook, Google and LinkedIn. In addition to the $85 million dispute resolution agreement, if the lawsuit obtains class action status, customers can get a 15% refund of the $25 subscription, and Zoom said it will take additional measures to prevent intruders.

 Let users know when the meeting organizer or other attendees use third-party applications in the meeting, and provide employees with specific training on data protection and data processing. "User privacy and security are Zoom's top priorities, and we attach great importance to the trust that users place in us," Zoom said in a statement.

 We are proud of what we have achieved on the platform and look forward to further innovation, with a focus on privacy and security. The agreement requires the approval of the U.S. District Judge Lucy Koch in San Jose, California to complete.

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