Zoom says it will soon offer both its free and paying users end-to-end encryption for video calls and launch a trial version in July. The company said to help prevent abuse, it will only make the feature available to users who provide a verified phone number. Earlier this month, Zoom had announced that it will be strengthening
encryption only for paying customers
. [caption id=“attachment_8197001” align=“alignnone” width=“1024”]
Zoom video conferencing app[/caption] The company has
attracted millions of free and paying customers
as the coronavirus outbreak forced more people to work from home, but has faced criticism over privacy and security issues. (Also read:
People have got the flavour of working from home and they aren’t going back to the office anytime soon: Zoom India head Sameer Raje
) Zoom also
came under fire for failing to disclose
that its service was not fully end-to-end encrypted. Taiwan and Germany have placed restrictions on Zoom’s use, while
Elon Musk’s SpaceX banned the app
over security concerns. The company also faces a class-action lawsuit. The company hired former chief security officer at Facebook Inc Alex Stamos in April to help bolster its security and rolled out some major upgrades. With inputs from Reuters.
)