In
a teleconference with lawmakers, Simons made reference to
concerns that Representative Jerry McNerney of California had
about Zoom. McNerney and others had written a letter to Zoom
expressing concerns about information collected about registered
and non-registered users and recordings made by Zoom subscribers
which may be stored in the cloud.
While not addressing the question of Zoom directly, Simons said
the agency takes its complaints seriously.
"We are very happy to take complaints from any source," he said.
"If you're reading about it (an issue) in the press, in the
media, then you can be assured that we're looking at it already
or we will because of the media attention. If it's out there in
the media, we're on it."
An FTC probe would not necessarily find wrongdoing.
Simons was speaking to a teleconference with a subcommittee of
the House Committee on Energy and Commerce.
Zoom has been one of the big beneficiaries of the new
coronavirus lockdowns, with millions of workers and students
using its video platform as they work and study from home.
But it has had growing pains. The company faced a backlash for
failing to disclose that its service was not fully end-to-end
encrypted and said it planned to develop tools that will give
more controls to meeting hosts and allow users to securely join
a meeting and submit them to external review.
(Reporting by Diane Bartz; Editing by Andrea Ricci)
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