With most countries still in at least a partial lockdown and coronavirus spikes continuing, videoconferencing is here to stay. (This is when “Zoom-bombing” became a common phrase.)ĭespite the furore, the company that same month announced it had 300 million daily meeting participants.
In April - after a slew of security and privacy issues arose - Zoom CEO Eric Yuan announced that the company would stop developing new features for 90 days to address the problems.
Few companies have seen the kind of growth - and boosted name recognition - as quickly as the San Jose, Calif.-based videoconferencing platform.