Critical Zoom Room bug allowed to gain access to Zoom Tenants
November 30, 2023
A critical vulnerability in Zoom Room allowed threat actors to take over meetings and steal sensitive data.
Researchers at AppOms discovered a vulnerability in Zoom Room as part of the HackerOne live hacking event H1-4420.
Zoom Rooms is a feature of the Zoom video conferencing platform designed to enhance collaboration in physical meeting spaces, such as conference rooms or huddle rooms. It provides a comprehensive solution for businesses and organizations that want to equip their meeting rooms with video conferencing capabilities.
The experts discovered the vulnerability in June 2023, they warned that an attacker can take over a Zoom Room’s service account and gain access to the victim’s organization’s tenant. The attacker can also have invisible access to confidential information in Team Chat, Whiteboards, and other Zoom applications.
The company promptly addressed the issue and clarified that the vulnerability had no impact on production tenants.
The exploitation of the issue allows threat actors to predict service account email addresses and take over the accounts.
Zoom automatically assigns an email address to any Room service account, it has the format rooms_
The service account is created with licenses for Whiteboards and Meetings and has extensive access within the tenant.
“The email domain is directly inherited from the user with the Owner role in the tenant at the time of creation – if the Owner has the email address [email protected], then the service account will be room_
When an attacker creates an arbitrary Outlook email address using the Zoom Room format during the sign-up process, they will receive the activation link. Upon receiving the link, the attacker can click it to activate the account.
The researchers noticed that service accounts cannot be removed from the Team Chat channel feature
“We noted interesting behavior in the Team Chat feature. Zoom provides a feature called Channels, which as the name implies, is a system of text channels. Channels are open to tenant employees by default. Room users were able to view the contents of any channel, including confidential information and persist in this access completely invisibly. Room users could not be removed from the channel by any administrator – even the Owner.” concludes the report. “This finding demonstrated how service accounts could be misused to gain unauthorized access. SaaS systems are composed of many moving parts and managing the security of each part is a difficult task.”
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Pierluigi Paganini
(SecurityAffairs – hacking, Zoom Room)