Cyber-security best practices for a hack-free Sochi games

With thousands of athletes, officials and spectators at Sochi, Russia for the Winter Olympic Games there are a lot of laptops, tablets and mobile devices — tempting targets for cyber criminals, and even government snoops.

Media reports have raised IT security concerns around the Sochi Games. While the initial reports may have been torqued, at the very least anyone visiting Sochi would be well-advised to take some precautions when it comes to their cyber safety and cyber security.

Along with technology companies such as Avaya and Microsoft, Russian security vendor Kaspersky Lab is an official supplier to the games. According to the vendor, it’s one of a number of companies providing information security to the game staff and infrastructure. It has provided Kaspersky Total Space Security Protection licenses for workstations, mobile devices, file and mail servers, collaboration servers and Internet gateways. Kaspersky threat specialists are also providing continuous monitoring during the games to ensure early detection and monitoring of any emerging threats.

In an interview last week at Kaspersky North America’s annual partner conference, Steve Orenberg, president of Kaspersky North America, said any time there are hundreds of thousands or even millions of people gathered in one place –particularly for  a high profile event such as the Olympic Games — there will be the potential for cyber threats, and if proper precautions aren’t taken devices get hacked.

“You’re no more or less exposed (at Sochi) than if you go to a football stadium with 80,000 at a game or an F1 race with 250,000 people on a race day,” said Orenberg. “It’s more newsworthy but the message (around security) really hasn’t changed.”

If he was going to Sochi, Orenberg said he would take the same security precautions he always does, such as accessing work files through a secure virtual private network (VPN), and wouldn’t take any extra steps.

Kaspersky has published a number of cybersecurity tips for Olympic visitors, including keeping anti-malware solutions constantly updated, using extra caution when using public Wi-Fi networks and avoid using unprotected networks, using a protected VPN connection of software solution with a safe payment option when using online payment or banking services over a public Wi-Fi network, and not falling for Olympic-themed spam messages.

Michael Knight, CTO of Encore Technology Group, a Kaspersky reseller, said staying secure at an event like Sochi  can be challenging, because at the end of the day, you do need to connect through some form of mass communications – most people don’t have satellite Internet.

“You need to do basic things, like if you’re walking around with your iPad don’t enable wireless unless you know where you’re connecting. Disable Bluetooth. Don’t let equipment out of your control, and just employ common-sense principles,” said Knight. “If you can find a hardline connection that’s obviously better, but you’re still connecting to a main junction point that could be compromised.”

He added it’s critical to have encryption on your devices and recommends using secure VPN connectivity, even if it’s just surfing the web back through your home office.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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Jeff Jedras
Jeff Jedras
As an assistant editor at IT World Canada, Jeff Jedras contributes primarily to CDN and ITBusiness.ca, covering the reseller channel and the small and medium-sized business space.

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