November 4, 2024

Tishamarie online

Specialists in technology

US church sues Zoom after Bible study ‘zoombombed’ by porn

Zoom file picImage copyright
Reuters

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Zoom has recently gone from 10m users a day to 200m

A California church is suing video chat company Zoom after a hacker allegedly hijacked a virtual Bible study class to post pornography and child abuse.

A hacker took over users’ computers and played “sick and disturbing videos”, according to the lawsuit filed by Saint Paulus Lutheran Church.

The San Francisco church’s leaders contacted Zoom for help, but the company “did nothing”, the suit says.

Zoom declined to comment, but pointed to new security features on the app.

The popularity of the Zoom video chat app has soared in recent months for work and leisure as virus lockdown measures have kept millions at home.

The inflated use has come with heightened scrutiny over its security and privacy measures, with reports of so-called “Zoombombing” – where uninvited guests hack into meetings, sometimes posting racist, abusive or explicit content.

Saint Paulus Church – one of the oldest churches in San Francisco – said in the suit, filed to a federal court in San Jose on Wednesday, that its 6 May bible study class was hacked by a “known offender – one who has been reported to the authorities multiple times”.

The eight Bible study students, mostly pensioners, had their computers’ control systems disabled while the hacker played pornographic videos.

Image copyright
Zoom

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As the app’s popularity has grown, it has faced increased scrutiny over its safety features

“The footages were sick and sickening – portraying adults engaging in sex acts with each other and performing sex acts on infants and children, in addition to physically abusing them,” the suit alleges.

When the students tried to end the video session and start again, the hacker attacked again, the suit says.

The church has filed a proposed class action lawsuit against the San Jose-based Zoom. It is seeking unspecified damages for claims of negligence, breach of implied contract, unjust enrichment and unfair business practices.

The teleconferencing giant post an updated to its security measures this week in a blog post, which promised more security features to come, including plans to build end-to-end encryption. It has been criticised previously for wrongly claiming the app already had the feature – meaning that only the participating users can access the messages and video.

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