![]() ![]() For those webinars where I enable Zoom’s built-in registration system, I would still see the e-mail addresses of attendees on post-webinar reports. Essentially, what I was reading indicated that a webinar attendee’s e-mail address would only be made available to webinar organizers if the attendee “entered their email address during the…webinar registration flow.” I care only about Zoom “webinars,” not standard Zoom “meetings,” so I quickly scrolled down the list of exceptions to see what, if any, implications this change would have on webinar attendee reports specifically. In early February, my heart skipped a beat when Zoom posted a message to its customers saying that on March 1, the e-mail addresses of Zoom meeting and webinar attendees would no longer be shown on post-event reports unless those attendees met certain criteria. So I find myself thinking or writing about Zoom on an almost daily basis. Indeed, almost all of my clients use Zoom for their webinars. ![]() It’s just that Zoom has now become, by far, the largest player in the webinar and virtual event space and anything they do, good or bad, is of consequence to millions of webinar organizers, presenters, and attendees. That’s really not my intention, despite the fact that this is my fourth consecutive post explicitly about Zoom, either praising them or panning them. I fear I’ve been focusing this blog too much on Zoom lately.
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