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How to protect your online video chats

As the video conferencing platform Zoom has grown in popularity during the coronavirus pandemic, so have instances of "Zoom bombing." Zoom bombing is when someone joins your meeting and disrupts it in some way. If you don't want to risk this happening while chatting with your grandparents or co-workers, there are steps you can take to prevent it.

Create a unique ID

Instead of using the personal meeting ID Zoom assigns when you create an account, pcmag.com recommends you instead generate a unique code.

Create a waiting room

By creating a waiting room, the host and/or co-hosts can control who joins a meeting. The "waiting room" option can be found under account settings. Once enabled, the host can either put everyone in the waiting room or "guest participants only," which adds people on different Zoom accounts or who are not logged into the waiting room.

Disable screen sharing

The Verge also recommends the meeting host disable the screen sharing feature. "If you schedule a meeting from the web interface, you won't see the option to disable screen sharing," the Verge writes.

Instead:

• Click on "Settings" in the left-hand menu

• Scroll down to "Screen sharing" and under "Who can share?" click "Host Only"

• Click on "Save"

Checklist

The Anti-Defamation League has created a handy meeting checklist.

Before the meeting:

• Disable autosaving chats

• Disable file transfer

• Disable screen sharing for non-hosts

• Disable remote control

• Disable annotations

• Use per-meeting ID, not personal ID

• Disable "Join Before Host"

• Enable "Waiting Room"

During the meeting:

• Assign at least two co-hosts

• Mute all participants

• Lock the meeting, if all attendees are present

If you are Zoom bombed:

• Remove problematic users and disable their ability to rejoin

• Lock the meeting to prevent additional Zoom bombing

Nancy Clanton, Atlanta Journal-Constitution