I note they say don’t forward teams invites but this is difficult to avoid once you send initial invite. Are you still protected if you still have to let everyone in to join once meeting starts? Here you still have to look at attendance list before starting and checking who is added to original invite.
Yes. The solution is to basically do an ID check at the door. The example in the article happened because they weren’t admitting each person individually. It was basically an open door policy, which is how the bot got in.
I note they say don’t forward teams invites but this is difficult to avoid once you send initial invite. Are you still protected if you still have to let everyone in to join once meeting starts? Here you still have to look at attendance list before starting and checking who is added to original invite.
Yes. The solution is to basically do an ID check at the door. The example in the article happened because they weren’t admitting each person individually. It was basically an open door policy, which is how the bot got in.
Zoom for dummies!
Exactly. lol.