South Korea probes cyber shutdown during Olympics ceremony

AFP  |  Pyeongchang (South Korea) 

today investigated a during the Winter opening ceremony, which follows warnings of possible cyberattacks during the Pyeongchang Games. and wifi systems crashed at about 7:15 pm (1015 GMT) on Friday and were still not back to normal at midday on Saturday, Games organisers said. Cyber-security teams and experts from South Korea's defence ministry, plus four other ministries, formed part of a taskforce investigating the shutdown, they said, adding that it didn't affect the Kim Yo Jong, the sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, South Korean Moon Jae-in and US were among the VIPs at late on Friday. The outage follows warnings of malware phishing attacks targeting organisations working at the Olympics, and allegations of cyberattacks from -- which has denied any involvement. has also blamed for a series of cyber incidents including the WannaCry global ransomware attack, which infected 300,000 computers worldwide last May. "We don't want to speculate because we're still trying to find out what the root source is," said Nancy Park, a for the Games organisers. "We have some reports, we've been working all night trying to find out and working with our partners." showed off its technical expertise with a dazzling gala opening ceremony on Friday which included state-of-the-art special effects and augmented reality to add extra impact for TV viewers. While internet and wifi were affected across the Olympic site -- spread over two main venues in mountainous eastern -- organisers said there was no impact on competition, which got into full swing on Saturday. "There were some issues that impacted some of our non- critical systems last night for a few hours," Games organisers said in a statement. "These have not disrupted any events, or had any effect on the safety and security of any athletes or spectators," they added. "All competitions are running as planned and the systems are working at the expected level." Last month, cyber-security firm said it had uncovered an attack targeting organisations involved with the Olympics, using a malicious email attachment. has been accused of involvement in a number of cyber incidents, including WannaCry -- although it has slammed that accusation as "absurd". has also denied launching any hacking attacks on the Pyeongchang Olympics, where its team is formally banned following the revelation of systemic doping. While organisers wouldn't comment on the possibility that an attack was behind the shutdown, experts believe disrupting the Games would be seen as a coup for many hackers. "The whole world's watching.

It's one of the largest stages you can possibly have to get a message out there," Ross Rustici, for intelligence Boston-based told Service. "You got a lot of lower-tier guys going after these games. It's head-hunting, bragging rights," Rustici was quoted as saying.

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First Published: Sat, February 10 2018. 13:35 IST