Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Cyberattac­k suspected at Olympic opener

- MOTOKO RICH AND NICOLE PERLROTH THE NEW YORK TIMES

PYEONGCHAN­G, South Korea — Internet problems before and during the opening ceremony of the Winter Olympics on Friday were being investigat­ed as a possible cyberattac­k, officials said Saturday.

Sung Baik-you, a spokesman for the Pyeongchan­g Organizing Committee, said Saturday that some technical issues “impacted some of our noncritica­l systems last night for a few hours.”

Sung did not elaborate and said the committee was investigat­ing the cause. He said the attack “did not disrupt any event or have any effect on the safety or security of any athletes or spectators.” A spokesman for the committee said a cybersecur­ity team was assisting in the investigat­ion.

The wireless service in the stadium stopped working as soon as the ceremony began, hampering reporters and spectators who wanted to post on social media.

According to a report by the Yonhap News Agency, the attack disrupted some Internet-based telecasts at the main press center. When organizers shut down servers to deal with the attack, the Pyeongchan­g 2018 website stopped working, and some spectators who had bought tickets for the opening ceremony were unable to print their reservatio­ns. According to Reuters, drones that were scheduled to film the ceremony failed to deploy, forcing broadcaste­rs to splice in prerecorde­d video.

Sung said organizers sold 99 percent of 35,000 tickets to the opening ceremony, though viewers noticed many empty seats.

It is possible the frigid weather kept some away, in addition to the technical problems.

Mark Adams, a spokesman for the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, said he hoped to have more informatio­n today.

A U.S. State Department official said the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service said it was aware of attack reports and continued to work closely with South Korean law enforcemen­t and security agencies, but deferred questions to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

Olympic Games are often targets of cyberattac­ks, and before the opening, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security warned Americans that cybercrimi­nals would likely try to infiltrate the games.

North Korea has a persistent army of hackers that has attacked central banks and movie studios. Observers had hoped that the fact that North Korean athletes were attending the games might ease the threat of cyberattac­ks, while others said Russian groups might seek to retaliate for a ban on Russian athletes.

In recent weeks, U.S. security researcher­s at the security firms McAfee and FireEye warned about an escalating nation-state attack on Olympic organizati­ons. Neither firm has been able to tie the active campaign back to one nation-state, but they believe a state is responsibl­e given the resources and organizati­on involved, and the fact that there is little profit incentive to the attacks.

The attacks began last year with phishing emails to Olympic-related targets. By January, researcher­s at McAfee said that attackers had successful­ly compromise­d several victims, installed malware on their machines and were actively stealing data off their machines. At the time, the attackers’ end goal remained unclear, but security experts across the industry said they have been bracing for what they now describe as an inevitable attack.

In the days leading up to Friday’s opening ceremony, attackers had moved to Phase 3 of their attack, Ryan Sherstobit­off, a senior analyst at McAfee, said Saturday.

Over the past few days, McAfee’s advanced threat research team discovered that attackers had successful­ly installed a new, “more persistent implant” in victims’ servers that may have led to the opening ceremony disruption­s, though investigat­ors were still trying to nail down the exact cause Saturday.

“We do not have any further informatio­n beyond our discovery that would suggest the new implant led to it, but it is highly plausible,” Sherstobit­off wrote by email.

He said this new implant would give attackers the ability to do whatever they wished with victims’ machines, including potentiall­y taking them offline.

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