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India says Zoom "not a safe platform" for video conferencing

India said on Thursday (16) videoconferencing software Zoom is "not a safe platform", joining other countries that have expressed concern about the security of an application that has become hugely popular worldwide during the coronavirus lockdown.

US-based Zoom Video Communications Inc has apologised for security flaws and says it is working to fix them. Problems have included "Zoombombing", when uninvited users gatecrash a video conference.


Taiwan and Germany have already curbed the use of Zoom, while Google banned the desktop version from corporate laptops this month.

"Zoom is a not a safe platform," the Cyber Coordination Centre (CyCord) of India's ministry of home affairs said in a 16-page advisory.

Founder and chief executive Eric Yuan this month apologised for what he called falling short of "the community's – and our own – privacy and security expectations." The company was dedicating resources to identify and fix the issues, he added.

The Indian ministry provided a list of adjustments it advised users to make to Zoom software's security settings to provide better protection from unauthorised entry into virutal conference rooms and attacks on users' computers.

Zoom has enjoyed a surge in usage since the virus outbreak began, as millions of people use it to stay connected while isolating themselves. In March it had about 200 million people using its system every day, up from 10 million last year.

As India enforced a nationwide lockdown late last month to curb the spread of the coronavirus, Zoom's smartphone app saw a sharp surge in downloads.

Even some Indian government officials have held discussions with industry executives to discuss coronvirus relief measures via Zoom.

One media report this week said the Indian government was advising its ministers not to use third-party software for sensitive meetings.

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29 diners infected with rare salmonella strain

Diners suffered blood in their stools, sickness, fainting and fever, with some requiring hospitalisation for further treatment

coventry.gov.uk

Coventry restaurant fined over £40,000 after 29 diners infected with rare salmonella strain

Highlights

  • Restaurant and director Mohammed Naveed ordered to pay more than £40,000 in total penalties.
  • 17 of 18 stool samples confirmed infected with same rare salmonella strain.
  • Victims suffered severe symptoms including blood in stools, hospitalisation and ongoing health issues.

A Coventry restaurant and its director have been ordered to pay over £40,000 after a food poisoning outbreak infected 29 diners with a strain of salmonella not previously seen in the UK.

Palm by H20 Limited was fined more than £22,000 after director Mohammed Naveed pleaded guilty to food hygiene offences at Coventry Magistrates' Court in September, the city council announced.

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