Secure Your Zoom Session from "Zoom-Bombing"

Zoom-bombing is a new phenomenon where some individual(s) who takes control of your Zoom sessions via voice interruptions and share inappropriate screens, etc. Below are some of the settings within Zoom which will help you keep control of your meetings and focus on your content.

All of settings mentioned below can be found in Zoom Profile settings ( https://4cd.zoom.us/profile/setting).

 


Only allow Students and employees into meeting

This setting will force ALL participants to authenticate themselves using InSite credentials before being allowed info meetings.

Recommendation: Turn it ON (for instructional activities)


Join before host

The participants could be having a party without you there to monitor.

Recommendation: Turn it off


Mute participants upon entry

Barking dogs and crying babies can take over your meeting unintentionally.

You might also consider disallowing participants to unmute themselves. In that case participants can use the “Raise hand” feature or the chat room to indicate when they want to speak. You can manually unmute them.

Recommendation: Turn on


Private chat

The chatroom is one of the key ways to get live feedback and participation with your participants. We want to see all the communication that is happening. Disabling private chat will help tamp down any possible bullying or harassment during your meeting.

Recommendation: Turn off


File transfer

The ability to send files to your participants is very handy for you. Not so helpful if the participants are sending inappropriate (even unintentionally) files/gifs/images to the group. Put your files on Onedrive, 3C Media, etc. and give them download links.

Recommendation: Turn off


Allow host to put attendee on hold

Sometimes participants have environmental consideration that require you to step in and pause them. The participant could have someone enter the room. They could have a TV running behind them.

Recommendation: Turn on


Screen sharing

Your company department meeting is a great place for colleagues to share their business work with the group. Your classroom might not be. Participants can take over the session share and put anything they would like on screen for all in attendance. You can make a participant a co-host if you would like someone else to share their screen.

Recommendation: Turn on “Host Only”


Disable desktop/screen share for users

We don’t need to see the personal photos and information of your co-host when they share. This setting will enable them to share an Application (Powerpoint, Firefox, Chrome, etc.) only. You should consider only sharing applications yourself.

Recommendation: Turn on


Annotation

Annotation gives you the ability to “draw” over the screen. It also gives that to your participants. They can draw anything that comes to mind over your presentation..

Recommendation: Turn off


Remote control

This is a handy support feature in a 1:1 session. You don’t want participants constantly requesting remote control of your desktop during meetings.

Recommendation: Turn off


Allow removed participants to rejoin

When you kick someone out of your meeting for any reason, they shouldn’t be able to come back.

Recommendation: Turn off


Waiting room

This is perhaps the most useful feature to help control your meeting or classroom. All participants will enter the waiting room before joining the main session. This allows you to let participants in as you are ready to receive them.

Recommendation: Turn on and customize



Above instruction adapted from instructions created and distributed by Rio Hondo Community College

 

Related articles

 

 

Contra Costa Community College District