Paris 2024 gearing up to face unprecedented cybersecurity threat

Published May 6, 2024
A photo shows a cybersecurity employee from the Paris 2024 flying squad using a tablet to test the cybersecurity rules on the Olympic site at Yves-du-Manoir Stadium in Colombes, near Paris on May 3. — Reuters
A photo shows a cybersecurity employee from the Paris 2024 flying squad using a tablet to test the cybersecurity rules on the Olympic site at Yves-du-Manoir Stadium in Colombes, near Paris on May 3. — Reuters

Paris 2024 is getting ready to face an unprecedented challenge in terms of cybersecurity, with organisers expecting huge pressure on the Games this summer.

Organised crime, activists and hostile states will be the main threats during the July 26-August 11 Olympics and the August 28-September 8 Paralympics.

Paris 2024, which has been working hand in hand with the French National Agency for Information Security (ANSSI) and cybersecurity companies Cisco and Eviden are looking to limit the impact of cyber attacks.

“We can’t prevent all the attacks, there will not be Games without attacks but we have to limit their impacts on the Olympics,” Vincent Strubel, the director general of ANSSI, told reporters.

“There are 500 sites, competition venues and local collectives, and we’ve tested them all.”

Strubel is confident that Paris 2024, which will operate from a cybersecurity operation centre in a location that is being kept secret, will be ready.

“The Games are facing an unprecedented level of threat, but we’ve also done an unprecedented amount of preparation work so I think we’re a step ahead of the attackers,” he said.

Paris 2024 has hired “ethical hackers” to stress test their systems and is using artificial intelligence to help them ascertain potential threats. “AI helps us make the difference between a nuisance and a catastrophe,” said Franz Regul, managing director for IT at Paris 2024.

“We’re expecting the number of cybersecurity events to be multiplied by 10 compared to Tokyo [in 2021].” “In terms of cybersecurity, four years is the equivalent of a century,” Eric Greffier, head of partnerships at Cisco, explained.

In 2018, a computer virus dubbed “Olympic Destroyer” was used to attack the opening ceremony of the Pyeongchang Winter Games.

While Moscow denied any involvement, the US Justice Department in 2020 said it indicted six Russian intelligence agency hackers for a four-year-long hacking spree, which included attacks on the Pyeongchang Games.

“We would like to have one opponent but we’re looking into everything and everyone. Naming the potential attackers is not our role, it is the role of the state,” Strubel said.

Last month, French President Emmanuel Macron said he had no doubt Russia would malevolently target the Paris Olympics.

The Games will take place amid a complex global backdrop, including Russia’s war in Ukraine and Israel’s military campaign against Hamas in Gaza.

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