Description

We create zoom meetings for our clients through the create meeting API to help them schedule a series of interviews. We set type:2 and join_before_host:true. We reuse zoom meeting ids between interviews. We ran into an issue today where a set of interviews were scheduled over two days using the same Zoom Meeting ID. The attendees where able to join the meeting on 4/20 but were unable to join the same meeting id on 4/21. This had worked for us in the past and the documentation seems to suggest that all schedules meetings should be live for 30 days after they are scheduled.

Is there a list of general reasons why someone might get this screen for a meeting that was scheduled but also attended in the past? Just this moment I hit this same issue organically when trying to talk to one of my partner companies.


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[15 minutes, self-paced online] In this brief overview, participants will learn best practices around using Zoom with Protected Health Information. Members of the Health Sciences (HST) Health Care Component (HCC) members must complete this training to get access to Zoom.

Anyone who is part of the Health Sciences (HST)/HCC (Health Care Component) and wants to use Zoom; this includes students, faculty, and staff members who are part of the BAA and / or BAA+, as well as anyone else who comes into contact with Protected Health Information (PHI).

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Yes. Starting with version 5.10.0 of Zoom desktop/mobile clients, hosts and co-hosts can rename meeting participants in the waiting room before they enter the meeting. After locating a participant's name in the waiting room section of the participant list, an option appears in the ... menu to rename that participant. The participant is notified of this change.

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Improved registration is not currently available in UW Madison Zoom but we are working with Zoom representatives to learn more about this feature. Until we have more information, if you are interested in this feature you can enter your information here and we will contact you if/when improved registration becomes available.

Zoom integration with Canvas is now available with limited support. Individuals who do not have experience with Zoom are encouraged to continue to use BlackBoard Collaborate while we work towards increasing documentation and support availability for this integration.

Preparing properly as a case participant will ensure all involved will have a good experience and avoid unnecessary delay. It is important that you pay close attention to this guidance and it is strongly recommended that you familiarize yourself with this software before participating in a court hearing.

Out of an abundance of caution, the Information Security Office has issued specific recommendations regarding use of Zoom to specific University departments/units to protect communications that may be at risk due to this vulnerability. If you have questions please contact the Information Security Office for additional information.

Update: On April 2, 2020, Zoom has updated their client software to address this issue. Users must have the latest version to receive this fix. Original information has been kept below.

First, the credential hash is not the username and password of a user in plain text. Instead, it is an encrypted form of that information. Second, while there are techniques to reverse the encryption of such hashes, password complexity and length mitigate this by increasing the amount of time required.

There are techniques where a stolen hash could be used as-is against other systems and grant access. This is commonly called Passing-the-Hash. Attacks of this nature tend to be very targeted and are not often a concern for our users.

The security researcher that identified this vulnerability shares that it requires the device to already be compromised in some fashion. The attacker must either have physical access to the macOS computer or have remote access through some other means.

On the latest MacBook Pro (16" M1 Max) running macOS Monterey the pinch zoom gesture on the track pad is unreliable. About half the time spreading my thumb and index finger apart or moving them closer together does produce the expected zoom effect, but the rest of the time either nothing happens at all, or the curser tracks the index finger but there's no zoom. This happens with Safari, Chrome, Photoshop, and other applications.

The problem does not appear to be caused by a hardware defect. It occurs with both the built-in trackpad and an external Magic Trackpad. Only pinch zoom is affected; other single and multi finger trackpad gestures work fine. Also, pinch zoom used to work on a 2019 MacBook Pro 16", but it became unreliable after upgrading to Monterey.

I hope that I can help you and anyone else out that is having this problem including Apple. I wanted to let you know that you aren't the only one experiencing this issue. I 100% have been experiencing this as well. This is almost certainly due to the new MacOS. I have a MacBook Pro (16' Intel 2019). It responds the same way (meaning its tracking about half the time when pinching to zoom). This happened after updating to Monterey. A fresh install did not fix this problem, nor will safe mode unfortunately.

As far as a fix I believe this needs to be looked over by the developer team. This seems weird but I notice after asking a few of my friends to try it out - some of them had more success zooming in first try than others. The issue seems to arise from size and / or shape of the inputs on the trackpad - meaning the size of your fingers and what part is touching the trackpad (believe it or not).

I have found a work around. However, my fix is less than ideal. Use both your hands (I use my both my index fingers) and spread them apart at the same time like your normally should be able to do with one hand. You will run into hiccups doing this but it almost always works with having fewer instances were it doesn't read the input of your fingers.

I'm pretty sure this is a software bug. It happened on my old 13' inch 2013 MacBook every once in a while while using Sketch. Now it's happened a couple of times on my new 16' inch MacBook Pro M1 Pro. I thought the app was the problem, but it seems from this forum it's bigger than that.

I also have been plagued with this... the trackpad on my 13" M1 Macbook Pro (OS X 12.3.1 Monterey) randomly stops recognising my pinches. Sometimes gesture recognition comes back after a few minutes... It may/may not be useful but it seems to happen to me more often when I'm working between multiple applications (clicking back and forth between windows) where I'm doing a lot of pinching to zoom (Miro, MS PowerPoint, Adobe CC Illustrator, InDesign).

Hi etresoft, I was on chat and on the phone with Apple customer support for a pretty long time. They appeared to be genuinely interested in getting to the bottom of this. They seemed to agree that the issue is most likely caused by a software bug, and that it would have to be fixed via an OS update.

This may be the same bug affecting the Magic Trackpad and Mouse gestures in general under Mac OS Monterey. I found a fix on a separate thread for this bug that appears to be around since Monterey was released and Apple have not fixed it even on 12.0.1.

Apple seems to be in low-level denial about this. I spent over 3 hours with 4 different service advisors on the phone today trying to get help with this problem for my 2018 i5 Mac Mini, as well as a few other problems that have sprung up with Monterey. Finally it got sent to the engineering team to look at. No lie though, two of the service advisors were in complete denial about the problem. One of them kept telling me it works for him on his machine, so he doesn't think it's an issue with Monterey. Another tried telling me I needed to buy the newest trackpad for it to work properly, and that my hardware isn't working (despite everything else about the trackpad working, and having no issues with this until the update). So based on my advisor experience, I'd say it's 50/50 Apple ever fixes this, as there seems to be a mix of goodhearted genuine intrigue muddled with Apple-Is-Infalible zealotry. 17dc91bb1f

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