As expected, Zoom has problems. Yesterday, one of the company's shareholders filed a lawsuit in the US for "overestimating privacy standards and hiding the fact that its service was not end-to-end encrypted."
According to one Publication According to Reuters, shareholder Michael Drieu told the court that the latest media revelations about these privacy issues began to pose problems for the company's share.
Through a general chaos in the market brought by his pandemic COVID-19The price της μετοχής για την Zoom Video, την εταιρεία που βρίσκεται πίσω από την application, rose from about $70 at the start of the year to $159,56 on March 23.
Last week, after several reports highlighting the security gaps of the app, Zoom CEO Eric Yuan apologized for the company's mistakes. He also stated that the company will stop developing new features the next 90 days to focus on security and privacy.
One of the main issues that has made the application weird is "Zoombombing", a practice used by pranksters to enter meetings, displaying pornographic material.
Last month, the FBI released a warning which asked people not to use it platform.
Many companies and organizations have banned the Zoom application. SpaceX sent an internal document to its employees asking them not to use the application for internal meetings. Earlier this week, New York stopped using the app in classrooms. Taiwan also does not allow government officials to use the platform.
This lawsuit shows that those involved have lost confidence in how the company operates, and it will probably be very difficult for the popular app to rebuild things.