Organizations providing services to the upcoming Olympic Games in Italy might not need to worry about landing a triple axel in figure skating, but they’ll face their own sweat-inducing challenge: making sure threat actors don’t take advantage of cyber vulnerabilities during the events. In 2024, France reported more than 140 cyber incidents throughout the Olympic and Paralympic Summer Games, the Cyber Threat Alliance outlined in a 2025 report. Of those reported incidents, 22 successfully gained access to information systems, while the remaining 119 had “minimal or no impact.” France’s Cybersecurity Agency, Agence Nationale de la Sécurité des Systèmes d’Information (ANSSI), provided support to almost 500 companies and organizations involved in the Olympics. Kristopher Russo, a principal threat researcher at Palo Alto Network’s threat intelligence and incident response group Unit 42, told IT Brew that bad actors during those Paris games carried out attacks against critical infrastructure associated with the Olympics, including distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) events. “The idea is really to both embarrass the hosts and the host countries of the game, show unpreparedness, get everybody on edge, and then also to push these individual ideologies and viewpoints to get that into the open,” Russo said. How to win the match.—CN |