Waterloo Region Record

Sports world adapts to growing cybersecur­ity threats

‘For most sporting leagues, their informatio­n ... is their currency’

- MICHAEL OLIVEIRA

TORONTO — Imagine the fallout if the National Hockey League was hacked and its star players — think Sidney Crosby, Auston Matthews and Connor McDavid — had their home addresses, phone numbers and other personal informatio­n made accessible online.

It’s an all-too-familiar scenario for Canadian lacrosse player Kevin Crowley, who was among the victims of a data breach that affected Major League Lacrosse last summer, when a spreadshee­t with the personal details of every player in the league and former players was mistakenly made available to an unintended audience.

“To be completely candid, we talked about it on our team and I don’t think anyone was all that surprised that something like that could have happened,” said the 29-year-old New Westminste­r, B.C., native, who was a No. 1 draft pick in the MLL and the National Lacrosse League.

“As lacrosse players we’re not making millions of dollars a year, but I can imagine if an NHL or NFL or NBA player got their account hacked, that’d be a much bigger deal in terms of what they could probably take out of their accounts.”

Cybersecur­ity has become a growing concern in sports leagues and players’ associatio­ns around the world in the wake of several data breaches and unrelentin­g waves of hacking attempts.

Just days before the MLL hack went public last August it was also revealed the Russian cyberespio­nage group Fancy Bears had obtained what it said was confidenti­al medical data on soccer players who had drug exemptions for the 2010 World Cup. The group released a similar trove of documents about a year earlier that it said revealed drug test results of tennis star Serena Williams and others from the World Anti-Doping Agency. WADA confirmed at the time that it had been hacked.

On Wednesday, the U.K.-based cybersecur­ity company Darktrace announced it is now providing the NHL Players’ Associatio­n with an artificial intelligen­cepowered service to help protect player data such as personal contacts and contract details.

“For most sporting leagues, their informatio­n in many ways is their currency,” said Darktrace spokespers­on David Masson.

“It’s the data about their organizati­on, how they work, how they train, how they pay, how much they receive, it’s all in there and for many of them there’s potential of theft, reputation­al damage, there’s potential for the network to be brought down.”

Stephen Frank, who has been the NHLPA’s director of technology and security since 2012, recalls there were no real hacking threats on the web back when he started on the job.

Nowadays, there are huge concerns around social medialinke­d attacks and phishing attempts.

“These players are deep-pocketed, high net-worth individual­s of some status, so whether it’s someone trying to exploit them through ransom or someone who wants to undermine the integrity of their online social media, phishing is generally still the most visited route of a bad actor,” Frank said, adding the threats linked to social media are multifacet­ed.

“There is the whole side of getting their account breached and taken over, there are impersonat­ion accounts that can be very detrimenta­l to a player’s brand and/or employabil­ity, but you also have a situation where you have followers retweeting and inserting nefarious links that will confer malware.”

Given that today’s young players are digital natives who were typically active on social media before becoming stars, there’s an important need to educate about “proper online hygiene” and security trends, starting with a rookie orientatio­n program, Frank said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada