Officials with the 2018 Pyeongchang Winter Olympics have now confirmed that local intranets at the games were hacked as the opening ceremonies commenced.
Prior to the beginning of opening ceremony festivities, the Pyeongchang 2018 official Olympics web presence stopped functioning, and could not access pages or print event tickets. Pyeongchang Olympic stadium wifi also came to a halt, as well as televisions and internet access for attendees at the main press facility onsite.
Pyeongchang 2018 spokesman Sung Baik-you commented that “There was a cyber attack and the server was updated yesterday during the day and we have the cause of the problem.”
“They know what happened and this is a usual thing during the Olympic Games,” Baik-yu noted, adding, “We are not going to reveal the source,” cited by The Guardian.
The Olympic spokesman observed, “We are taking secure operations and, in line with best practice, we’re not going to comment on the issue.”
Baik-yu clarified that there would be no additional information on the hack, pointing out that “security […] at these games, is incredibly important.”
International Olympic Committee head of communications Mark Adams asserted that he did not know who shut down the website as the opening ceremonies got underway, cited by The Guardian.
“We don’t reveal details in public because actually at the moment, we are making sure that our systems are secure, which they are, so discussing details is not helpful,” Adams declared.
“We will have a full report,” added the public relations chief, asserting, “I guess it will be made public.”
The 2018 Winter Olympics, currently ongoing in South Korea’s mountainous Pyeongchang district, is the 23rd event of its kind in modern history. Over 2000 participants from 92 nations will attend. Current weather conditions are expected to favor outdoor competition, remaining below freezing at night but becoming warmer during daylight hours.
The quadrennial sporting event will end on February 29.