We are all using Zoom and other services to video conference with coworkers and students these days. Seminars, lectures, board meetings - basically every situation in which a group of people get together in person before COVID-19 - are all finding their way into a virtual format. But with this convenience, there come some risks as the relative anonymity of participants can allow for misuse of the platform. And the switch to this sort of less-formal meeting can give rise to less than professional behaviors.
Here are some best practices for virtual meetings.
There are a ton of options in each of the many streaming meeting services to improve the experience. Here are a few available in Zoom:
Mute / Unmute: Mute or unmute your microphone.
Video: Start and stop your own video.
Share: Start a screen share. You'll be able to select what you want to share. Learn more.
Participants: See who's currently in the meeting. The participants list also gives you access to these options:
More often than not, feedback and other audio distractions are the cause of one or more people not speaking having their mic unmuted. If an issue arises, look for those participants without the mute icon in their image and suggest they mute their feeds. As a host, you have the option to mute all participants.
The easiest way to avoid getting Zoombombed (a term for abusive, unwanted behavior in a meeting) is to keep your event private and your invite list small. If you are creating an event for a large, public audience, do not share your meeting link directly on social media. Instead, publicize an R.S.V.P. email address where people can state their interest in attending the event. That way, you can vet the list of prospective attendees and share the event link with only those whom you choose.
A meeting password — which is automatically generated by Zoom — will prevent uninvited users being able to join your event, even if they have the meeting link. Unfortunately, many Zoombombers swap and obtain meeting codes on social media. Be careful with where you share your meeting code, and if you can, wait to send it out until shortly before the event begins. Read how to add a password here.
A waiting room gives the meeting owner the ability to put everyone seeking to join the meeting in a virtual holding area. The host can then select only those whom they have invited to the meeting. Sometimes Zoombombers will use familiar names, so be careful to confirm the person’s identity by asking them to turn their camera on. Read how to create a waiting room here.
One popular way Zoombombers hijack a meeting is through the app’s screen sharing function. When screen sharing privileges are set to “all,” any member who joins a meeting could project offensive imagery to meeting’s participants. Read how to keep screen sharing privileges limited here.
Even if you limit screen sharing, trolls may draw offensive words or shapes over the host’s presentation using the annotation tool, which gives users the ability to draw onscreen in different colors using a cursor. Read how to restrict the annotation feature here.
Zoombombers will leverage every feature they can to ruin a meeting. For some meetings it might make sense to block private chats, turn off file transfers and restrict custom backgrounds, all of which could be used to taunt or harass participants. Read more on host controls here.
Trolls can be persistent. One way to thwart their efforts is by preventing them from rejoining. Unfortunately some attacks are coordinated, so there may still be other bad actors in your meeting, but at least you’ll be one down. Read how to disable the “allow removed participants to rejoin” option here.
Zoom recently announced that it would be shifting all engineering resources to combating harassment and improving security features in order to better protect users. “We are making sure if we get issues in terms of security, we update the client right away,” said Oded Gal, Zoom’s chief product officer. “That’s why it’s important to update.”Read how to make sure you’re using the latest version of the app.
(liberally adapted from Zoom's help pages and an article in the New York Times)