I suppose this all boils down to UDP being usually blocked by most private 
corporate networks. Only solution I can recommend is that UDP is unblocked on a 
public network.

Sent from my iPhone

Begin forwarded message:

> From: Denis Noctor <denisnoc...@gmail.com>
> Date: October 15, 2020 at 1:29:35 AM CDT
> To: user@openmeetings.apache.org
> Subject: General and Corporate User... (Off Topic... Sorry)
> 
> Hi there Maxim... and everyone out there,
> 
> I know this email might be considered a little off topic... but resonates an 
> issue that may have been overlooked in the overall application of OM at a 
> corporate level.
> 
> Let me try to explain. At present OM is browser based... thankfully Chrome 
> and Firefox support WebRTC etc. I am aware of the Safari issues being 
> discussed regarding audio and vid etc.
> 
> The majority of users I have are experiencing a relatively fluid experience 
> regarding OM... however I have encountered 2 scenarios over the last few 
> months that contradict each other... though it is not an OM issue... but 
> maybe someone out there might be able to give some insight.
> 
> Company “A” (via it’s corporate WiFi network) was able to access a room... 
> ... see room interactions (for example switching from whiteboard to 
> whiteboard... typing onscreen etc) but could not share or receive audio/mic 
> and video of other users. Clearly there were restrictions (firewall or 
> others) on their side. However, when users used the public access network... 
> everything was fine. Sweet. No problem now.
> 
> However, I have encountered a similar situation with Company “B”... and have 
> asked them to use their “public” network... but they can’t experience 
> incoming nor outgoing audio or cam.
> 
> Can you recommend a permissions checklist that they could follow to give them 
> full access and functionality to OM?
> 
> One user from company “B” brought their computer home... logged in and they 
> had no problem with audio/mic/cam.... so obviously there are restrictions on 
> a corporate level.
> 
> Can anyone recommend a permissions checklist that company “B” needs to follow 
> (grant access to)... without compromising their network or security?
> 
> Company “B” has used Zoom, Microsoft Teams without issue... but of course, 
> these are downloaded apps (and not necessarily browser based).
> 
> @Maxim... I now this is going to cause you a headache... and I apologize in 
> advance... but may open a few other discussions.
> 
> Any help, suggestions would be appreciated.
> 
> I know this is a huge request... but might shape future releases. 
> 
> All the best,
> 
> Denis.
> 
> Sent from my iPhone

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