
Of course, if anything changes about Keybase’s availability, our users will get plenty of notice. Ultimately Keybase's future is in Zoom's hands, and we'll see where that takes us. There are no specific plans for the Keybase app yet. Initially, our single top priority is helping to make Zoom even more secure. How do all these accommodations fit into the security story? This is what we're excited to work on. These features are critical to connect the world in such a dangerous time. This is great for classrooms and town halls. They must continue to work.Īlso, Zoom calls can optionally be recorded and distributed by the host afterwards. All of these cases work, and they work well. You can also use their website, and in that case, you might be password-authenticated or even a guest. You can use the Zoom app on just about any platform, but you can also dial in over a plain old copper phone line. In our estimation, Zoom owes much of its success to its flexibility. Sound familiar? This is what we've been working on. Often, the right answers bubble up into user experience.īeneath the surface, the correct solution usually requires auditable chains of signatures, likely dangling off a merkle tree. How do you know a server can't lie by omission, say when a person loses a device or leaves a group, and the server doesn't want to admit it?.How do you build a dynamic group or team, where a compromised server can't inject someone extra, but admins still can?.


Is there some "trust on first use" (a.k.a TOFU)? If so, what happens when someone upgrades a device?.

