New day, new privacy issue for the popular Zoom app. Last night, The Intercept published a report that highlights that the claim of the Zoom application that it has end-to-end encryption for its sessions is not true.
Η company teleconferences boasts of end-to-end encryption on its website, but the Intercept's post proves that the service only uses encryption in data transfer.
Transport encryption is a Transport Layer Security (TLS) protocol that secures the connection between your computer and the server you're connected to. This same encryption is used in secure connections between any HTTPS website and the browser you.
The main difference between transfer encryption and end-to-end encryption is that the Zoom application (or the server to which you are connected) can see your data.
In a comment on The Intercept, application development company Zoom confirmed that the service does not provide end-to-end encryption at this time:
E2E encryption for Zoom video sessions cannot be enabled at this time. Live video conferencing uses a combination of TCP and UDP. TCP connections are made using AES encrypted TLS and UDP connections using a key that is traded through a TLS connection.
The company clarified that the "end-to-end" report it uses refers to Zoom endpoints on the Zoom server, which is located among the customers. Thus, it can technically control your data, while the company denies that it can access end-user data or that it sells data to third parties. It would be much fairer of course to clearly state the encryption standards they use.
This is not the first time Zoom policies have provoked reactions. A post by Bleeping Computer published today states that hackers can steal passwords users through the Windows application.
Last week found the iOS app of the service sends data to Facebook without the explicit consent of the user.
The company immediately after the revelation, removed him code which was sending data to the social network. Last month, the nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation Foundation (EFF) reported that using Zoom's products can have serious implications for your privacy.
Yesterday, the Tor browser suggest Avoid the Zoom app and use an open source app called Jitsi Meet.