The Scotsman

Shock as online class with swimming squad hit by ‘Zoom bomb’

- By ILONA AMOS iamos@scotsman.com

An online exercise class with Scotland’s national swim squad was invaded by “abusive content” as hundreds of adults andchildre­njoinedthe­virtual workout during the coronaviru­s lockdown.

The incident happened yesterday during an event run by the country’s governing body for swimming that was hosted via the internatio­nal video conferenci­ng platform Zoom.

The event, which had around 300 attendees, offered the aquatics community the chance to train alongside the country’s top performanc­e athletes and swim stars.

Staff at Scottish Swimming said they were “devastated” by the cyber attack and insisted the matter was being taken “very seriously”.

The organisati­on apologised on social media to subscriber­s and said the incident was being reported to police.

On Twitter, Scottish Swimming posted: “Sadly our link for this morning’s Zoom workout has been compromise­d due to abusive content.

“We are sorry for the inconvenie­nce and we will look to reschedule in the near future.”

In another post it added: “Scottish Swimming will ensure that additional security measures are in place for any future online meetings.

“Again, we are deeply sorry for anything Zoom guests were subjected to on this morning’s call.

“The matter will be passed on to the police.”

In an official statement, Scottish Swimming said: “Unfortunat­ely the link was Zoombombed with disturbing content shared with circa 300 people that had signed in to the event.

“The video was immediatel­y shut down and the incident referred to the police and their cyber-crime unit.

“We apologise to everyone involved and deeply regret the outcome of today’s event.”

The organisati­on said it would continue to support and engage with the swimming community during isolation and had launched a full review of online tools and security measures to prevent similar incidents happening again in future.

The statement added: “At a time when the aquatics community was pulling together and supporting one another so positively, it is very upsetting to have a minority cause upset and distress during the lockdown.”

The group also gave out helpline informatio­n on Twitter for anyone affected by what they had witnessed.

Alan Lynn said: “Such a shame that something worthwhile and good for the swimming community has been attacked by detestable hackers with no concern for decency.”

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