Zoom also said it would block repeated attempts to scan for meeting IDs, and that it would no longer automatically indicate if a meeting ID was valid or invalid. Zoom responded by saying it was enabling passwords by default in all future scheduled meetings. The Check Point researchers said enabling passwords on each meeting was the only thing that prevented them from randomly finding a meeting. Security experts at Check Point Research did exactly that last summer, and found they were able to predict approximately four percent of randomly generated Meeting IDs. Naturally, hackers have figured out they can simply guess or automate the guessing of random IDs within that space of digits. According to its makers, zWarDial can find on average 110 meetings per hour, and has a success rate of around 14 percent.Įach Zoom conference call is assigned a Meeting ID that consists of 9 to 11 digits. ZWarDial, an automated tool for finding non-password protected Zoom meetings.
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