As the Coronavirus pandemic continues to force people to work from home, countless companies are now holding daily meetings using videoconferencing services from *Zoom*. But without the protection of a password, there’s a decent chance your next Zoom meeting could be “Zoom bombed” — attended or disrupted by someone who doesn’t belong. And according to data gathered by a new automated Zoom meeting discovery tool dubbed “*zWarDial*,” a crazy number of meetings at major corporations are not being protected by a password. https://krebsonsecurity.com/2020/04/war-dialing-tool-exposes-zooms-password-... Also https://www.zdnet.com/article/the-internet-is-now-rife-with-places-where-you... The internet is rife with online communities where users can go and share Zoom conference codes and request that pranksters connect and hurl insults, play pornographic material, or make death threats against other participants -- in a practice called Zoom-bombing or a Zoom raid.