Video conferencing app Zoom has a major security flaw in its Mac client,Watch Genie in a String Bikini (2006) letting any website turn on your Mac's camera without a warning, security researcher Jonathan Leitschuh claims.
In a blog post Monday, Leitschuh detailed the vulnerability, which he says he'd disclosed to Zoom more than 90 days ago, and the company still hasn't fixed it.
SEE ALSO: Google Nest camera security flaw allows former owners to observe others' homesThe problem lies in Zoom's usage of a web server on users' local machines. This makes some of Zoom's cool features possible, for example, clicking on a simple link in your web browser automatically starts up the app.
Having an app install and run a web server on a user's machine with an undocumented API "feels incredibly sketchy," Leitschuh says. But there's more. According to Leitschuh, "this web server can do far more than just launch a Zoom meeting. (...) this web server can also re-install the Zoom app if a user has uninstalled it."
This is bad by itself, but Leitschuh discovered a vulnerability that let him launch a Zoom call, with video enabled, on a user's machine without permission. The same vulnerability allows the attacker to perform a DOS (denial of service) type attack on a user's machine.
Leitschuh says that he'd contacted Zoom on March 26, offering the company a quick fix for the vulnerability. After a lot of back and forth, Zoom partially fixed the flaw, but Leitschuh was able to bypass their fix, after which the company offered no additional fix. The security issue is still present in the latest version of Zoom for Mac, 4.4.4.
In a blog post Monday, Zoom defended its app's functionality, claiming that users are prompted to turn their video off when joining their first meeting, and can set the video to off in subsequent meetings; if they do so, it would be impossible for the host or other participants to turn their camera on. Furthermore, Zoom claims, "because the Zoom client user interface runs in the foreground upon launch, it would be readily apparent to the user that they had unintentionally joined a meeting and they could change their video settings or leave immediately."
The company said they will give users more control of their video settings in an upcoming, July 2019 release.
The company also addresses the presence of the web server on user machines, saying it's a "workaround to a change introduced in Safari 12" and a "legitimate solution to a poor user experience problem."
Zoom has assessed that both the video call issue and the DOS issue were "low risk," which is why the company decided not to change the app's functionality. The company also promised it will launch a public vulnerability disclosure program in the "next several weeks."
The main question users should be asking themselves is whether they want to sacrifice their system's security for a bit of added functionality -- likely, functionality they can live without. Zoom's ability to re-install itself without user permission after it's been uninstalled is particularly worrisome. Since there's no official fix for the issue, you can remove Zoom's web server from your machine by following the steps described in Leitschuh's post.
Topics Cybersecurity
“I Just Paint”: The Personal, Sincere Art of Billy ChildishTaking Apart the Glitz and Glamour of Modern WebsitesOn Hating—and Then Loving—The Little PrinceIn Repair: On Boots, Coats, and DepressionThe Psychedelic Effects of Video GamesIn Which Robert Walser Translates Paul Verlaine (Kind of...)The Paper Architecture of the Soviet UnionLawrence Ferlinghetti’s Travels in California, 1961The Future of Toilet Art Is in JapanOn a Train in Norway—Is That Kate Bush by the Waterfall?On “Little Deuce Coupe” and the Joys of Unlikely Love SongsJames Salter's Acceptance Speech by James Salter“Personality”: Meeting Enid BlytonFeminist Filmmaker Chantal Akerman Has Died at SixtyThe Art of Weathered Lithuanian Garage DoorsEileen Myles on Reading Out Loud: “Writing Is All Performance”Having Trouble Writing? Try “Once Upon a Time.”Preorder “The Unprofessionals,” Get a Free TPR ShirtInside the House Where Coltrane Composed “A Love Supreme”Eileen Myles on Reading Out Loud: “Writing Is All Performance” Why Game Developers Keep Getting Laid Off Fire TV vs. Roku vs. Chromecast: Between a set Android 5.0 Lollipop Tested: Performance and Battery Life Best earbuds deal: Save $40 on Soundcore AeroClip earbuds Internet for All Five Things I Didn't Get About Making Video Games (Until I Did It) How Deus Ex Predicted the Future The Homebrew Litecoin Mining Project The State of PC Gaming in 2015 Best laptop deal: Save $200 on the Asus Zenbook A14 These 9 Devices Might Be a Waste of Your Money The Year in Tech: 2014 Top Stories NYT mini crossword answers for May 20, 2025 The Most Popular Computing Device Has Yet to Be Invented: The 15 Testing Reliability: Puget Systems' List of Tried and True PC Hardware Agentic AI: What is it and why are people talking about it? Kérastase's K WTF: 10 of the Weirdest Products Ever How to watch Microsoft Build 2025 keynotes with CEO Satya Nadella The Story of Solitaire, One of the World's Biggest Video Games
2.3349s , 8225.96875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch Genie in a String Bikini (2006)】,Steady Information Network