With the Paris Olympics 2024 on the horizon, organizers are bracing for potential cybersecurity threats and terrorism, particularly concerning the grand opening ceremony’s high-profile status. Despite these concerns, there’s an air of optimism regarding their readiness to counter these challenges.
Scheduled from July 26th to August 11th, the XXXII Summer Olympic Games in Paris will unfold under vigilant scrutiny as authorities remain keenly watchful against possible cyberattacks and security breaches.
Paris Olympics 2024: Focus on Cybersecurity, Terrorism
Over 4 billion viewers are expected to watch the Olympic and Paralympic events in Paris from July 26 to September 8, 2024. Ten million spectators, 20,000 journalists, and 15,000 athletes from 206 countries will all be present at this international event. There will be 878 events spread over 40 competition sites and 22 cities, covering 54 different disciplines.
There’s a significant risk of cyber threats during Paris Olympics 2024 from various sources—cybercriminals, hacktivists, and even state actors aiming to disrupt the Olympic Games. Their targets encompass the Games’ IT systems, such as press rooms, ticketing, stadium entry systems, TV broadcasts, and even the power supply to the physical sites.
While there were 450 million cyberattacks successfully averted during the Tokyo Games in 2021, the organizing group for the 2024 Olympics in Paris anticipates eight times as many, or roughly 3.5 billion.
The primary goal is to avoid the issues that have plagued past Olympic Games before Paris. Reflecting on the challenges faced by the organizers of the 2018 Winter Olympics in South Korea serves as a stark reminder of the importance of this objective.
A hack caused the Olympic website to be down for twelve hours, and the Wi-Fi network in the Olympic stadium was disconnected. Ten years prior, at the opening ceremony of the 2008 Olympic Games in China, a malicious piece of malware known as Olympic Destroyer caused all the displays to go dark.
The Paris Olympics in 2024 are gearing up for their third and fourth rounds of private security tenders, intending to enlist between 17,000 to 22,000 agents each day.
Out of this force, 2,000 will be specifically allocated to the opening ceremony, which will include a grand procession along the Seine River and is anticipated to draw as many as 600,000 spectators.
On July 26, 2024, over 30,000 military and police officers would also be called into action to secure the area.
“For the opening ceremony, there is a specific protocol with the state and the Paris City Hall. We’re confident that we’re on track, that we will reach our goals,” stated Paris 2024 Security Director Bruno Le Ray, as reported by Sports Star.
He continued by saying that the $349.02 million (320 million euros) security budget remained the same.
“The first risk is the terrorist risk. We’ve integrated it, unfortunately, in all security plans,” said Thomas Collomb, security executive director for Paris 2024, reported Reuters.
Collomb served as the deputy head of safety and security for official sites during the Euro 2016 soccer finals, which took place just seven months after the November 2015 Islamist attacks in Paris.
These attacks involved gunmen and suicide bombers targeting cafés and entertainment venues simultaneously. Given this experience, Collomb is exceptionally well-versed in the critical nature of counter-terror preparations.
Le Ray, who served as the military governor of Paris during the 2015 attacks, acknowledged that the private security industry was tense and that there was a 20,000 agent shortage countrywide, but he also maintained that the tender recruiting process was on time, The Reuters reported.
Paris 2024 is also battling against attempts to spread misinformation. The body issued a warning last week after French security agencies claimed to have discovered an Azerbaijani misinformation operation intended to undermine France’s ability to host the event.
As the countdown to the Paris Olympics intensifies, the looming specters of cyberattacks and terrorism cast shadows over the grandeur of the anticipated opening ceremony.
With a meticulous security protocol involving thousands of agents and collaboration with military and police forces, the organizers are determined to navigate the delicate balance between safety and spectacle ensuring Paris 2024 cybersecurity.
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