Los Angeles Times

Zoom’s pledge to work with law agencies criticized

Comments by CEO of videoconfe­rencing service irk users amid protests over police.

- Bloomberg

Zoom Chief Executive Eric Yuan’s comments that the software company would work with law enforcemen­t by not offering the strongest encryption for free calls using the popular videoconfe­rencing service hit a nerve with some users, drawing criticism amid nationwide protests about the role of police in the U.S.

Yuan said on a conference call Tuesday that Zoom Video Communicat­ions Inc.’s efforts to provide the highest standard of digital security, called end-to-end encryption, would go to paying customers rather than the millions of people who use the app without charge for yoga classes, weddings, religious services and other social and business gatherings.

“Free users, for sure, we don’t want to give that because we also want to work together with the FBI, with local law enforcemen­t, in case some people use Zoom for the bad purpose,” said Yuan, also the company founder.

The remarks struck thousands of people on social media as tone-deaf, coming as marches against police brutality have clogged many U.S. cities since George Floyd, an unarmed black man, died as a Minneapoli­s police officer pinned his knee to Floyd’s neck in a video widely shared online.

Some Zoom users vowed to dump the service and switch to competitor­s. Even some paying customers said they had canceled subscripti­ons for the company’s app. The software maker reported soaring revenue and profit Tuesday, cementing itself as one of the key beneficiar­ies of the coronaviru­s era, when millions of people have used Zoom to remotely work, learn and keep in touch with loved ones. The stock jumped 7.6% to a record $223.87 at Wednesday’s close and has more than tripled this year.

End-to-end encryption makes it impossible for third parties to decipher communicat­ions. Although Zoom used to claim that its video calls featured that level of security, in fact all calls have a lower level of encryption.

Yuan sought to assuage users’ concerns Wednesday in his weekly webinar, saying that the company was striving to “do the right thing ” for vulnerable groups, including children and hate-crime victims, whose abuse is sometimes broadcast through Zoom’s platform.

“We plan to provide endto-end encryption to users for whom we can verify identity, thereby limiting harm to vulnerable groups,” he said. “I wanted to clarify that Zoom does not monitor meeting content. We do not have backdoors where participan­ts, including Zoom employees or law enforcemen­t, can enter meetings without being visible to others. None of this will change.”

Zoom has only the email addresses of free users and Yuan said that doesn’t provide enough informatio­n to verify people’s identities. He said the company is trying to determine how it might offer end-to-end encryption to individual­s who have purchased a Zoom subscripti­on to extend the duration of their calls. Zoom offers 40minute meetings at no cost.

Days before his comments on working with law enforcemen­t, Yuan publicly shared a letter he wrote to employees about the grievances that spurred the recent demonstrat­ions, including “racism, injustice and violence.”

During his Wednesday webinar, he echoed his support for the black community.

“We will also assess how best to philanthro­pically contribute to support some of the external partners who are on the front lines tackling social and racial justice,” he said.

 ?? Mark Lennihan Associated Press ?? SOME ZOOM users vowed to switch to rivals in response to remarks by CEO Eric Yuan, center, shown at the company’s IPO event at Nasdaq in New York last year.
Mark Lennihan Associated Press SOME ZOOM users vowed to switch to rivals in response to remarks by CEO Eric Yuan, center, shown at the company’s IPO event at Nasdaq in New York last year.

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