zoom screen

Connecticut Student Charged with Computer Crimes For 'Zoombombing’ Virtual Classroom

The teenager was able to disrupt multiple online classes, leading the Madison, Conn. school district to suspend its use of Zoom, the video conferencing software.

The trend of “Zoombombing” — or crashing video conference rooms uninvited to disrupt meetings with obscenities, pornographic images or other disturbing behavior — has led to a Connecticut teenager facing computer crime charges.

After disrupting virtual classes held by teachers at Daniel Hand High School in Madison, the student was arrested and charged with a fifth-degree computer crime, fifth-degree conspiracy to commit a computer crime and breach of peace, The Hartford Courant reported.

The teenager was able to join online classes on multiple occasions and used “obscene language and gestures,” said Madison Police Capt. Joseph Race. Authorities also identified a co-conspirator living in New York who assisted in disrupting a Madison class, and an arrest warrant is pending against that individual, according to The New Haven Register.  

“If you walk into a classroom and do what he [the arrested teen] did to a teacher, you would be arrested,” Race told the Courant.

The local school district had used the Zoom platform to connect students and teachers during closures due to the COVID-19 crisis. Now, Madison Public Schools have stopped using Zoom and are turning to Google Meet, a similar teleconferencing software, for virtual classrooms.

Other districts across the country, including New York City schools, have taken similar steps as Zoom addresses criticism over its security practices. In the majority of cases, Zoombombing takes place due to a lack of password protection on meeting rooms and allowing users besides the meeting host to share their screens. The company has released more tutorials and ways for users to implement these protections, along with other protective actions.

Tom Scarice, the superintendent of Madison schools, wrote in a note to parents on Tuesday that the district has “decided to suspend use of Zoom for whole group instruction until the district can have more assurance that Zoom has addressed security concerns.”

“We understand that staff and students were looking forward to face-to-face interactions and we look forward to resuming this using Google Meet,” Scarice wrote. “Thank you for your patience as we work to provide the best possible structure for distance learning.”

About the Author

Haley Samsel is an Associate Content Editor for the Infrastructure Solutions Group at 1105 Media.

Featured

  • 77% of Americans Support Gun Detection Technology in Schools, Workplaces, and Houses of Worship

    More than three-quarters of Americans (77.4%) believe gun detection technology should be deployed in schools, workplaces, and other public spaces, according to new survey data released recently. The national survey shows strong support for incorporating camera-based gun detection into existing video surveillance systems. Read Now

  • Eagle Eye Networks Launches AI Camera Gun Detection

    Eagle Eye Networks, a provider of cloud video surveillance, recently introduced Eagle Eye Gun Detection, a new layer of protection for schools and businesses that works with existing security cameras and infrastructure. Eagle Eye Networks is the first to build gun detection into its platform. Read Now

  • Beyond Containment: Redefining Cybersecurity and the Digital Campus at Washington College

    In the aftermath of a ransomware attack, Washington College stood at a crossroads — its legacy defined by centuries of academic excellence, but its digital infrastructure revealing the fragile underbelly of modern campus operations. Read Now

  • California School District Protects Campuses With Cloud-Managed Access Control

    Established in 1901 in the heart of Silicon Valley, the Mountain View Los Altos High School District (MVLA) serves 4,400 students across the cities of Mountain View, Los Altos, and Los Altos Hills. It houses two award-winning high school campuses commonly ranked in the top 1 percent nationally; it also hosts a continuation high school, an adult education campus, an alternative academy for arts and technology, and a nontraditional high school program held at an innovation center. Read Now