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Aggressive Hackers Are Targeting Rio's Olympics (fastcompany.com)

The Daily Dot is warning about fake wi-fi hubs around Rio, but also networks which decrypt SSL traffic. And Slashdot reader tedlistens writes: Steven Melendez at Fast Company reports on the cybercrime threat in Rio, and details a number of specific threats, from ATMs to promotional USB sticks to DDoS attacks [on the networks used by Olympic officials]... "Last week, a reporter for a North Carolina newspaper reported that his card was hacked immediately after using it at the gift shop at the IOC press center. And on Friday, two McClatchy reporters in Rio said their cards had been hacked and cloned soon after arrival."
Even home viewers will be targeted with "fraudulent emails and social media posts" with links to video clips, games, and apps with malware, as well as counterfeit ticket offers -- but the threats are worse if you're actually in Rio. "In an analysis last month of over 4,500 unique wireless access points around Rio, Kaspersky found that about a quarter of them are vulnerable or insecure, protected with an obsolete encryption algorithm or with no encryption at all."

10 of 71 comments (clear)

  1. Welcome to the 3rd world by Ritz_Just_Ritz · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Welcome to the third world. I suspect this will give some pause to even those corrupt Olympic committee members who accepted the bribes to give the nod to Rio.

    People will look fondly back to where the major inconvenience was to put the toilet paper in a trash bin rather than flush it down in Sochi. Brasil has consistently snatched defeat from the jaws of victory at every turn.

    I'm all for spreading around the wealth, but there should be some basic litmus test of "you can or cannot achieve even the most rudimentary accommodations for both athletes and visitors. It was pretty clear that Brasil wasn't in a position to pull this off, yet here we are.

    1. Re:Welcome to the 3rd world by pete6677 · · Score: 4, Funny

      If their toilets can't even take down some toilet paper, how will they take down my footlong American-sized turd?

  2. I hate to say it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    But it's a fucking shambles over there at the moment. Tech failures, controlled explosion of a bomb(least it was caught I guess), a media tent got a bullet through it, security failing miserably allowing people without credentials to get in, Swedish rowing coaches got mugged apparantly, a media cameraman had his camera stolen, unsafe bike track and a few foreigners were apparantly kidnapped a day ago. Pretty poor turnout for a lot of events as well.

    Let's hope there's no more issues.

  3. Oh Really? by JustAnotherOldGuy · · Score: 2

    "The Daily Dot is warning about fake wi-fi hubs around Rio, but also networks which decrypt SSL traffic."

    No shit? I thought this was a given in Rio. Or any large city.

    --
    Just cruising through this digital world at 33 1/3 rpm...
  4. open wi-fi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    in 7 years in Brasil I have never seen an open wi-fi.

    an open wi-fi in Rio is an obvious honeypot

  5. They can't do that by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 3, Funny

    The Olympic committee has issued a decree that hackers cannot hack them. Also, if hackers do try to hack them they are not allowed to use any of the trademarks - including the word "Olympic" or the 5 rings symbol - in reference to their planned hacks.

    1. Re:They can't do that by dwywit · · Score: 2

      I'm waiting for /. to report that it's been served a lawsuit for using the word "Olympic" in an article.

      Assuming /. isn't an official supporter, that is.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
  6. Undoing secure sockets layer (SSL) traffic by khz6955 · · Score: 3, Informative

    "the international hub for the Olympics, was found to host many networks that are capable of decrypting Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) traffic — undoing a protocol put in place to keep data protected." link

    Only if the client desktop computer is configured to accept forged certs as used in the Cisco SSL Inspection device.

  7. It doesn't spread the wealth though by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Olympics is rarely a net gain for the country hosting it. Despite lots of tourism and lucrative media contracts, the cost is so high that usually they are coming out behind on the deal. Now that's ok for a country with a lot of money, who doesn't mind spending some on this kind of thing and maybe has a plan for the facilities after the games. However for a country like Brasil it is basically just a loss.

  8. Card hacked? by mjwx · · Score: 2

    that his card was hacked

    You don't hack a card any more than you bake a car.

    At best you can call it a colloquialism based on a gross misunderstanding. I prefer to call it ignorance and irresponsibility.

    The "hack" in this case is just reading the card number, expiry date and name from the card. You can get that information in a variety of ways, hijacked/fraudulent card readers, RFID chips, just reading the front of the card. This is information the card gives out freely. So you have to be sure that where you use your card is secure.

    Its not a hack, it's fraud.

    This guy had his card details stolen because he was stupid. He wasn't paying attention to where he is (I will only use my card in an ATM in developing nations, everywhere else gets cash... and I'm very selective about my ATMs too). Its not Rio's fault he got scammed, it's his fault for not knowing how to handle Rio.

    Beyond that, he'll refuse to take responsibility for himself thinking "the bank will take care of me" meanwhile the bank is trying to figure out how to make someone else pay for it.

    --
    Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.