If it is bombed, it is going to be a student within your course and they will be very easily identifiable. Therefore, the web-conference cannot be “bombed” by an outsider. It does not allow anyone from outside to access the meeting unless you invite them specifically with their email address. ![]() Canvas Conferences require students be logged in to the learning management system in order to access the conferencing tool. One way to avoid Zoombombing is to not use Zoom.Ĭanvas has a built-in conferencing tool called Canvas Conferences (also known as BigBlueButton). Zoom also posted a helpful blogpost on how to prevent Zoombombers. Our friends at CSUN put this video together with tips on how to avoid Zoombombing and what to do if someone bombs your meeting: During the COVID-19 period, educators are reporting incidents of “Zoom-bombing” or “Zoom trolls.” ![]() However, in this time of disruption, there has been an increased likelihood that you may have uninvited attendees show up in your meetings and deliberately try to derail it. It is being used by many faculty to assist them with a smooth transition to temporary remote teaching and learning. Zoom is a synchronous (live) web conferencing tool that is fantastic for fostering meaningful instructor-student and student-student interactions. From an article written by Michelle Pacansky-Brock - see bottom of post for the link to her original article.
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