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HSteindl
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Newcomer
October 18, 2021
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Securing Zoom Rooms Windows

  • October 18, 2021
  • 1 reply
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Hello community

Articles like https://support.zoom.us/hc/en-us/articles/203689369-Configure-Auto-Login-for-Zoom-Rooms describe how to start with Zoom Rooms on a Windows Platform but I have yet to find info about how to make it more secure.

For comparison MS Teams Rooms use a multitude of Windows features like Assigned Access, no shell for the user, etc.
Is there anything similar available for ZOOM Rooms? The obvious plan is to make the Zoom Room PC as less PC-like as possible and towards an embedded appliance.
How about the preconfigured systems like the ones from Lenovo, Dell, HP, etc.  Do they use any special tricks to tackle this?
thanks in advance
HST

    Best answer by Rupert

    The HP Collaboration PC G5, for example, uses Windows IoT.

     

    https://zoom.us/hardwareItem?name=HP%20Collaboration%20PC%20G5

     

    https://www8.hp.com/h20195/v2/GetPDF.aspx/4AA7-5737EEAP.pdf

     

    1 reply

    Rupert
    Community Champion | Customer
    RupertAnswer
    Community Champion | Customer
    October 18, 2021
    HSteindl
    Newcomer
    HSteindlAuthor
    Newcomer
    October 20, 2021

    Thank you Rupert.  This sounds like a good way to do it. However I am still kind of puzzled that this topic does not seem to be a bigger issue in the Zoom world. I would say, that the huge majority of IT admins do not know how to really lock down a PC-appliance and still make it perfectly usable for audio/video = realtime applications.

    Rupert
    Community Champion | Customer
    Community Champion | Customer
    October 20, 2021

    Hi @HSteindl 

     

    It depends.

     

    IT Admins in large enterprise will generally have robust mechanisms for locking things down. I think Enterprise forms the bulk of Zoom Rooms users.

     

    IT Admins in smaller organizations may not have the same mechanisms, maybe because they don't need them.

     

    Some (maybe most) organizations may also choose to have their A/V systems on a segregated network anyway - so things may not need to be as heavily locked down as office systems.