The Watch Baddies Vol. 4 Onlinecoronavirus pandemic has made video conferencing incredibly popular, but also given us a new term to learn: Zoom-bombing. It's when anonymous users enter your video chat—in this case, on the Zoom Meetings service—and cause all sorts of disruption.
This phenomenon is not limited to Zoom, however, so Google is now set to protect educators against unwanted intrusions on its own Google Meet.
Google classes an anonymous user as someone who isn't signed in with a Google account. Anyone classed as a G Suite for Education user will have their privacy increased in the coming days. As the G Suite Updates site explains, "anonymous users can no longer join meetings organized by anyone with a G Suite for Education or G Suite Enterprise for Education license. This prevents participants from sharing a link publicly to encourage anonymous users to request access."
It's possible to disable the new protection, but an admin will have to contact G Suite support to make it happen. It's on by default otherwise, and should be in place for all education users within 15 days, so before the end of July.
As to why Google is implementing this protection, students have been known to share the link to a scheduled Google Meet and ask pranksters to crash the video call in order to frustrate teachers and end class early, according to ZDNet. In the coming days, that will no longer be possible; even if someone does manage to crash a call, they will be known by the Google account they used to gain entry.
Lil Nas X adopted some nice dogs with the internet's helpSuspected unexploded bomb is actually just an enormous glittery baubleThe Moto Z4 lets you go 5G on the cheapJerks stole photos from Maisie Williams' private Facebook accountRedditor claims MacBook Pro exploded during 'normal use'This is what it's like to control an autonomous car from miles awayWoman accidentally dresses like 'Spongebob' character. Oops.NASA spots explosion of XIKEA lets you decorate your living room like 'Friends,' 'The Simpsons''Swamp Thing' review: The best thing DC has produced in a long timeCrisis counselors were on set for 'When They See Us' cast and crew'Call of Duty: Modern Warfare' 2019: Everything you need to knowStarbucks, late to the game, releases Pokémon Go FrappuccinoTesla Model 3 available in Australia, New Zealand, Japan and Ireland'Fire Zuck' projected onto location of Facebook shareholders' meetingI met the author of the viral 'don't pick my flowers' noteA ridiculous gift guide for your Trump'Lives are at risk:' Hillary Clinton blasts fake news'Kids' is a mesmerizing iOS arthouse game: ReviewApple gives iOS for iPad a fancy new name, and some updates GoDaddy accidentally helped hackers mess with cryptocurrency sites 'Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity' is an excessive Zelda spin 'Super Mario Bros. 3' just sold for a record $156,000 DHS cybersecurity director subtweets Trump after being fired via tweet A former CIA agent is crowdfunding an attempt to buy Twitter just to ban Trump Uber's first pitch deck shows just how far they've come That total eclipse thing totally messed with porn traffic Pregnancy brand Frida shows us what real 'milk Kylie Jenner finally spills what led to her breakup with Tyga There's a Sexy Jon Snow costume because Halloween is coming The Wander app is a nostalgic Wayback Machine for VR Donald Trump just retweeted the world's worst eclipse meme, and this can't be real Snap concludes investigation into racial bias on content team Trump blasts media because they didn't praise Charlottesville response Twitter 'exploring' adding a dislike button or downvote system 'Myst' (yes, that 'Myst') is coming back as an Oculus VR game in December Baby whale close to shore wows beachgoers, but the story is actually really sad KFC is now teaching its employees to fry chicken with a super creepy VR game Google Pay adds rewards and group payments in massive update Everything coming to Hulu in December 2020
2.7505s , 8193.7890625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Baddies Vol. 4 Online】,Feast Information Network