2024 Olympics put cybersecurity teams on high alert (2024)

Escalating cyberthreats, hacktivism, and cyber espionage suggest the Paris Games may present the greatest cybersecurity risk ever. Here’s what to look out for and how to prep.

2024 Olympics put cybersecurity teams on high alert (1)

Credit: Robin Utrecht / Shutterstock

As athletes from around the world vie for gold at the 2024 Olympics and Paralympics in Paris, cybercriminals are fine-tuning their own game plans to hack, attack, and exploit the largest event on the planet, making the 30th Olympiad potentially the greatest cybersecurity risk in history.

“Cybercrime and cyberthreats have gone through the roof in recent years. And this is the biggest show on Earth, not just in sport but probably the biggest event on Earth. So you know it’s going to be the target for disruption by people for a variety of reasons,” says Richard Thurston, research manager of European security services at IDC.

There were 450 million cyberattacks against the COVID-delayed Tokyo summer games in 2021, according to Cisco, the network infrastructure provider for the Paris games. Cisco expects eight times more attacks to target the Paris Olympics (running July 26 to August 11) and Paralympics (happening August 28 to September 8).

An IDC research report released ahead of the games suggests “Paris 2024 will see the highest potential for cyber disruption in history.” IDC goes on to call these “the most connected Olympic games ever” with “the most complex threat landscape” and “the highest degree of ease for threat actors to execute attacks.”

Much of that ease is courtesy of artificial intelligence, since Paris is hosting the first Olympics of the generative AI era.

GenAI has already been used in a sophisticated online smear campaign against the games. In 2023, Russian disinformation collective Storm-1679 created an AI-generated video starring a deepfake of Hollywood star Tom Cruise. The video, “Olympics Has Fallen” (a churlish nod to the 2013 action thriller “Olympus Has Fallen”), used a deepfake of Cruise’s image and voice to disparage the International Olympic Committee (IOC) in the run up the Paris games.

Cybercriminals are also weaponizing AI for malvertising and SEO poisoning before and during the Olympics, warns Ashley Jess, senior intelligence analyst at Intel 471.

“I just saw last week that someone was sharing how to use ChatGPT to build websites that optimize a search engine with your malicious website at the top [of search results]. It was leveraging hundreds of websites at the same time to do it,” says Jess.

This AI-based tactic could also be used to build fake Olympics ticketing websites and send those sites to the top of online searches for Paris games tickets, she adds. To hamper ticket fraud, Paris organizers have designated only one website for legitimate ticket sales, tickets.paris2024.org. As of June, however, French authorities had already identified 338 fraudulent Olympics ticket sites on the web.

Hacktivism and cyber espionage

Cybercriminals motivated by greed will use Olympic-themed emails and websites as clickbait to launch money-making exploits such as phishing and ransomware attacks. Hacktivists, on the other hand, may target the Paris games motivated by political and social causes. Current geopolitical conflicts in Ukraine and Gaza could make the 2024 summer Olympics particularly ripe for hacktivist attacks.

“A hacktivist will most likely do website defacement or denial of service attacks against the infrastructure that supports the event, mostly to embarrass the host country or the organization,” says Sami Khoury, head of the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS), the Canadian equivalent of ANSSI. “They’ll take advantage of the opportunity because there will be billions of people watching the Olympics.”

“Hacktivism is not just going to be against the Olympic infrastructure,” Khoury continues. “In the context of the Paris Olympics, it could be against France, but it could also be against other countries and governments who support Ukraine.”

During the 2016 summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, DDoS attacks by the hacktivist collective Anonymous struck down various Brazilian government websites, a digital protest against police and military raids in Rio’s impoverished favelas.

This summer’s Paris games are also a prime target for state-sponsored cyber espionage. Like hacktivism, it has a political motive; unlike hacktivism, it’s always coordinated, funded, or sanctioned by a particular government. The CCCS issued a bulletin in May warning about the risk of cyber espionage at large global sporting events. It noted that Russia’s ban from several international sports organizations — including the IOC and the Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) — following the invasion of Ukraine could prompt the Kremlin to back retaliatory cyber espionage.

A cyber espionage operation at the Rio Olympics unfolded like something out of a James Bond movie. When an official from the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) logged into WADA’s database using the Wi-Fi at his Rio hotel, hackers stole his login credentials. Weeks later, the Russian cyber espionage group Fancy Bear publicly posted the confidential WADA medical records of more than 125 athletes who had competed in Rio, including American gymnast Simone Biles and tennis stars Venus and Serena Williams.

Protecting the games

The French government’s national cybersecurity agency, Agence national de la sécurité des systèmes d’information (ANSSI), is overseeing the monumental effort to keep the Paris Olympics cyber safe. Since mid-2023 it has held several awareness-raising seminars and crisis-planning exercises with multiple stakeholders across the government, security, and sports ecosystems. Eviden (a division of Atos, the lead IT integrator for the games) is managing Paris Olympics cybersecurity services and operations, “which can be delivered from a dedicated SOC for the games, as well as up to 17 SOCs worldwide,” according to the IDC report.

It’s a far cry from the jaw dropping gaffe made by Japan’s cybersecurity minister ahead of the 2020 Tokyo summer Olympics. Just two years before the games were scheduled to be held, Yosh*taka Sakurada admitted he didn’t use computers and seemed confused about how USB drives work.

Despite years of planning, anything can happen right up until the eleventh hour. Just before the opening ceremonies of the 2018 winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea, Russian state sponsored hackers unleashed a malware attack dubbed Olympic Destroyer. It knocked out the official Olympics website and stadium Wi-Fi, wreaked havoc with broadcast operations and the on-site news media center, and prevented some spectators from entering the ceremonies when tickets couldn’t be printed off.

The Paris games have already had their own near brush with cyber disaster. While some banks, airlines, and media outlets around the world suffered outages to their Microsoft-based systems after a faulty CrowdStrike update on July 19, Paris organizers said the impact on Olympics operations was minimal and limited to the delivery of some uniforms and accreditations.

Third-party cyber risk

Though the CrowdStrike incident wasn’t a malicious cyberattack, it throws the issue of third-party risk into the Olympic spotlight. Even if ANSSI successfully fends off cyberattacks directly targeting this summer’s games, the Paris Olympics could still be disrupted if a malicious cyber strike takes out one of its IT providers somewhere along the daisy chain.

“Basically, you have third-party software that’s part of the infrastructure and clouds for [Olympics] telecommunications or security or ordering processing. If they go down or they’re attacked, that can have a ripple effect that’s very, very large,” says Eugene Spafford, executive director emeritus at Purdue University’s Center for Education and Research in Information Assurance and Security (CERIAS).

Spafford says the most immediate risk is to the IT infrastructure of “organizations that are connected to what’s going on in Paris or around the Olympics in some way.” That includes direct suppliers and partners of the event, plus hotels and other tourism businesses catering to the 10 to 15 million people expected to visit France during the games.

IDC’s Thurston, however, urges cybersecurity teams worldwide to recognize that the Paris games heighten the level of cyber risk well beyond the perimeter of Paris, France, or the Olympics themselves. Besides the proliferation of Olympic-themed phishing, malware, and ransomware, he points out that cybersecurity teams in every country and industry may be short-staffed due to summer vacations. On top of that, 24-hour coverage of the Olympics on TV and social media could hurt the ability of line of business employees to sidestep cyber scams and hackers.

“Employees might be streaming something about the Olympics or might be looking at the web coverage while they’re working at the same time,” says Thurston. “Sometimes security slips at those moments. That’s why organizations just have to be cognizant of those threats that might change during the Olympic period.”

If the Paris games do go off without a major cybersecurity hitch, no one behind the scenes will climb onto the podium for a medal. But silence, in that case, would truly be golden.

What SOC teams can do

Tips for SOC teams around the world during the heightened cyber risk period of the Paris Olympics:

  • Monitor geopolitical events and be aware of how they might make your organization (or your partners and suppliers) the target of an Olympic-related hacktivist cyberattack that could have a ripple effect on your IT systems, says Intel 471’sJess.
  • Be extra vigilant of cyberthreats if your business or organization has any relationship with companies playing key roles in the Olympics supply chain, IDC’s Thurston says.
  • Perform tabletop exercises or other tests of your backup plans, fallback services, fallback servers, and hot spares to make sure they work as intended, Purdue’s Spafford notes.
  • Raise awareness across your organization of Olympic related phishing, clickbait, scams, and fraud campaigns and how they work, Spaffordadds.
  • Ensure your Internet-facing infrastructure and operating systems are up to date and patched, and all staff are using strong passwords with MFA, advises CCCS’ Khoury.
  • If your company is directly tied to the games as a supplier or partner, don’t let your guard down at night or on weekends during the games; cyber incidents are more likely to happen during the 9 to 5 time zone of the Paris games rather than your own time zone, Khouryadds.

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2024 Olympics put cybersecurity teams on high alert (2024)

FAQs

2024 Olympics put cybersecurity teams on high alert? ›

As athletes from around the world vie for gold at the 2024 Olympics and Paralympics in Paris, cybercriminals are fine-tuning their own game plans to hack, attack, and exploit the largest event on the planet, making the 30th Olympiad potentially the greatest cybersecurity risk in history.

What is the controversy with the 2024 Olympics logo? ›

Many have expressed disappointment, arguing that the emblem's minimalist design and the stylised depiction of Marianne are too close a resemblance to commercial logos rather than capturing the unique look expected of an Olympic symbol.

What are the threats to the Olympics in 2024? ›

Terrorism. The security threat from terrorist groups and radicalized individuals is arguably the biggest concern for security forces and Olympic Games Paris 2024 organizers.

What are the cyber attacks in the Olympics? ›

Japan 2020 Olympics Cyber Attack

The 2021 Summer Games in Tokyo reported that it faced 450 million attempted security events. These included the use of Emotet malware, email spoofing, phishing, fake websites, attacks on critical infrastructure, ransomware, DDoS attacks, and 5G network attacks.

What does the 2024 logo mean? ›

The design for the Paris 2024 Olympic Games in France is a unity of the gold medal, the flame, and the face of Marianne -... a cherished symbol of the revolution and the people of France.

What is the biggest controversy in the Olympics? ›

In one of the biggest scandals in sports history, Nancy Kerrigan was physically attacked on January 6, 1994, which put her at risk of never skating again. At the time, she was the top ice skater in the US and a gold medal hopeful for the 1994 Winter Olympics, The New York Times reported.

What sports are being removed from the Olympics 2024? ›

Meanwhile, some other sports that were featured at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics and Games past, including baseball, softball and karate, will not make an appearance in Paris this year. Here's what to know about the sports coming and going from the Paris 2024 Summer Games.

What is the scandal on the 2024 Olympics? ›

Spying Scandal

Officials punished the women's team for using drones at the Paris Olympics. The scandal threatens to affect the men's team at the 2026 World Cup, which Canada is co-hosting. Canada is accused of spying on New Zealand practices before their opening game.

Why is Russia banned from Olympics 2024? ›

Team Russia is barred from these Games because of the war in Ukraine.

What countries are boycotting the Olympics in 2024? ›

Which countries aren't participating in the 2024 Paris Olympics? Russia and Belarus aren't participating in the Olympic Games this year, after the International Olympic Committee voted to suspend both from the competition because of the ongoing war in Ukraine.

What are the top 3 types of cyber attacks? ›

Types of Cyber Attacks
  1. Malware Attack. This is one of the most common types of cyberattacks. ...
  2. Phishing Attack. Phishing attacks are one of the most prominent widespread types of cyberattacks. ...
  3. Password Attack. ...
  4. Man-in-the-Middle Attack. ...
  5. SQL Injection Attack. ...
  6. Denial-of-Service Attack. ...
  7. Insider Threat. ...
  8. Cryptojacking.
Aug 13, 2024

What is the biggest cyber attacks? ›

What is the biggest cyberattack in history? The biggest cyberattack in history was arguably the Jonathan James attack on NASA and the U.S. Department of Defense in 1999, especially due to the fact that the attack compromised such trusted, high-profile organizations.

What is the most common cyber incident? ›

What are the 12 most common types of cyberattacks?
  • Malware.
  • Denial-of-Service (DoS) Attacks.
  • Phishing.
  • Spoofing.
  • Identity-Based Attacks.
  • Code Injection Attacks.
  • Supply Chain Attacks.
  • Social Engineering Attacks.
May 14, 2024

What is the motto of 2024 Olympic Games? ›

It's about delivering Games that are more responsible, more inclusive, more equal and more spectacular than ever before. Paris 2024 is a slogan: Games wide open !

What does the year 2024 represent? ›

On February 10, 2024, we will enter the Year of the Dragon. According to the Chinese zodiac, the dragon is the most powerful and auspicious animals and is the only animal that is a mythical creature. It symbolizes strength, wisdom, luck and prosperity.

What is the mascot for 2024? ›

What are the Paris 2024 mascots supposed to be? The Phryges are based on the Phrygian cap, which became a symbol of the freedom, or “Liberté”, that French revolutionaries fought for between 1787 and 1799. Marianne, the national personification of France, is often depicted wearing the small red hat.

What is the controversy with the Olympic mascots? ›

When its design was unveiled last year, Phryge was greeted with indifference bordering on ridicule in France. Resembling a puff of cotton candy with blue stick legs — or, as the French have widely described it, an intimate part of the female anatomy — the mascot was called “incomprehensible” in a national poll.

What is the issue with Paris 2024 Olympics? ›

Participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes
  • Participation of Russian and Belarusian athletes.
  • Potential for neutral athletes.
  • Threatened boycotts from other nations.
  • Sporting federations' recognition and designation of athletes.
  • ROC suspension.
  • Participation of Israeli athletes.

What is the meaning of the mascot of the 2024 Olympics? ›

Mascot creators were inspired by “the famous Phrygian cap — a symbol of freedom.” The red Olympic Phryge (pronounced FREE-juh) and Paralympic Phryge — together the Phryges — may seem innocuous.

Is the Paris 2024 logo a woman? ›

Marianne is a fictional woman who represents the French Republic. You can see her in the famous painting by Delacroix "Liberty Leading the People". She was represented on the postal stamps. Her face is often represented with the same features, and she wears a Phrygian cap.

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