In an effort to boost security on its platform, Zoom Video Conferencing has acquired Keybase, a provider of secure messaging and file-sharing services.
The deal will bring Keybase’s team of security and encryption engineers into the fold and will help accelerate Zoom’s plan to build end-to-end encryption that can reach current Zoom scalability, the company has said.
The financial terms of the deal have not been disclosed.
In a blog post, Keybase said that its aim will be to make Zoom more secure, but “there are no specific plans for the Keybase app yet. Ultimately Keybase’s future is in Zoom’s hands, and we’ll see where that takes us. Of course, if anything changes about Keybase’s availability, our users will get plenty of notice.”
Keybase was founded in 2014 by Chris Coyne and Maxwell Krohn, the co-founders of the popular dating website OKCupid and SparkNotes, a provider of study guides. Keybase itself has raised $10.8m led by venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz and has 16 employees, according to Crunchbase and LinkedIn.
Zoom has seen its usage shoot up dramatically as the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic forces many around the globe to work and learn from home. However, Zoom’s data privacy and security practices were called into question as cases of teleworking and online classroom hijacking — also known as “Zoom-bombing” — began being reported in March, which included reports of video meetings being disrupted by pornographic images, hate images, or threatening language.
The company immediately jumped into action to address these security concerns. The acquisition is a “milestone” in Zoom’s 90-day security enhancement plan, a strategy the company put in place to boost the security of its offerings, address data privacy concerns for customers and partners, and build user trust, according to the company.
The New York City-based Keybase team will work alongside Zoom’s team to proactively identify, address, and enhance the security and privacy capabilities of the Zoom platform. Keybase’s Krohn will lead the Zoom security engineering team, reporting directly to Eric Yuan, CEO at Zoom the two companies said.
Krohn and Yuan will work together to determine the future of the Keybase product, said the companies.
Zoom in April revealed Version 5 of its popular videoconferencing platform that was bolstered with several new security-minded features, including support for AES 256-bit GCM encryption, a single, easy-to-use icon that contains all security features, and the ability to report users for inappropriate conduct.
The company at the end of April retracted a claim in a blog post that it has 300 million daily active users and said it has that many daily meeting participants instead. The company said it meant to say it has “300 million daily meeting participants.” The term daily active users counts a person only once while daily active participants can count a person multiple times if that person is using Zoom multiple times a day.