> They don't offer end-to-end encryption, but it is encrypted between each client and the Zoom servers,
I think it's absurd that when talking about private messages the bar for privacy would be so low as to say that client-server encryption would be a "feature"-
> they have promised there's no way for a Zoom employee to spy on a conversation without visibly joining the meeting
That's false unless no one at zoom has logins to any of the servers that route the calls or deploy code to them. Let's be clear and specific about the terms. "no way for" and "not allowed under guidelines" have very different technical meanings.
I think it's absurd that when talking about private messages the bar for privacy would be so low as to say that client-server encryption would be a "feature"-
> they have promised there's no way for a Zoom employee to spy on a conversation without visibly joining the meeting
That's false unless no one at zoom has logins to any of the servers that route the calls or deploy code to them. Let's be clear and specific about the terms. "no way for" and "not allowed under guidelines" have very different technical meanings.