Zoom Video Communications (ZM -0.55%), the popular video conferencing app that’s faced a series of security and privacy issues, has tapped Facebook’s (META 0.84%) former security chief as an adviser. 

In a blog post, Alex Stamos, who is now an adjunct professor at Stanford, said after he posted a series of tweets last week offering ways Zoom could respond to its security issues he was approached by Zoom CEO Eric Yuan. Yuan wanted input from Stamos and his help building out its security, privacy, and safety capabilities by serving as an outside consultant, which Stamos agreed to do. “I was impressed by his (Yuan) clear vision for Zoom as a trusted platform and his willingness to take aggressive action to get there,” wrote Stamos. 

Woman on a video conference in her living room with papers on a table.

IMAGE SOURCE: GETTY IMAGES.

The move to bring Stamos on is part of the tech stock's 90-day plan to improve the security and privacy of the platform. With millions of people sheltering in place amid the COVID-19 pandemic, Zoom has become a go-to platform to communicate, collaborate, and learn. As of March, it has 200 million daily active users compared to a peak of 10 million at the end of December. But the app has been in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons. Reports of Zoombombing have led school districts, companies, and even governments to ban the use of Zoom. It also prompted a shareholder lawsuit and raised the ire of New York Attorney General Letitia James. 

Stamos said in his blog post he isn’t only motivated to help by the technical challenges but by how critical Zoom has become during the pandemic. “The adaptation of a successful enterprise collaboration tool into virtual classrooms, virtual doctor’s offices and a myriad of other applications (including at least one virtual Cabinet Room) has created privacy, trust and safety challenges that no company has ever faced,” wrote Stamos.