Zoom bomber streams porn during call with Fed Gov. Christopher Waller
A Zoom conference featuring Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller was cut short on Thursday after one of the attendees posted pornographic images that were visible to the others on the call.
A few minutes before the event was to start, one participant using the screen name “Dan” began displaying graphic, pornographic images, according to a Reuters reporter on the call.
Microphones and video were not muted by the organizer upon joining.
More than 220 participants were on the Zoom call at one point before it was terminated.
The Fed said the event, which was to feature a speech by Waller as well as a question-and-answer session, was canceled due to “technical difficulties.”
Fed events are typically highly choreographed and security is usually tight.
MBCA’s roughly 100 members include banks with between $10 billion and $100 billion in assets.
“We were a victim of a teleconference or Zoom hijacking and we are trying to understand what we need to do going forward to prevent this from ever happening again. It is an incident we deeply regret,” said Brent Tjarks, executive director of the Mid-Size Bank Coalition of America (MBCA), which hosted the event via a Zoom link.
“We have had various programs and this is something that we have never had happen to us.”
Tjarks said that he suspects one of the security switches that mutes those watching an event was set incorrectly, but he was not sure of the details.
The decision to cancel was made in consultation with the Fed after the intrusion.
“We have been deeply upset to hear about these types of incidents, and Zoom strongly condemns such behavior,” Zoom spokesman Matt Nagel said in a statement to Reuters.
“We take meeting disruptions extremely seriously and, where appropriate, we work closely with law enforcement authorities.”
Zoom became the go-to method of teleconferencing during the coronavirus pandemic, when office closures forced white-collar employees to work remotely.
Pranksters have exploited vulnerabilities in the system by so-called “Zoombombing” meetings with disruptive methods, such as making racist comments or showing explicit content.
In March 2020, the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Boston office issued a warning about Zoom, telling users not to make meetings on the site public or share links widely after it received two reports of unidentified individuals invading school sessions.
In response to the disruptions, Zoom introduced major upgrades, including end-to-end encryption for video calls.
With Post Wires