Sports & Fitness

Athlete surveillance warnings cloud China’s Winter Olympics

Foreign athletes, dignitaries, media workers advised to leave phones, laptops at home for fear of personal data leaks

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 21 Jan 2022 1:00PM

Athlete surveillance warnings cloud China’s Winter Olympics
Canberra-based cybersecurity firm Internet 2.0 warned in a recent report that official Beijing Winter Games software − including a VPN and an anti-virus product − from two of the event’s Chinese tech sponsors could potentially collect troves of user data without their knowledge. – Pexels pic, January 21, 2022

BEIJING – A growing number of Western nations and cybersecurity groups have issued digital surveillance warnings for next month’s Winter Olympics in Beijing, with some advising foreign athletes to leave personal phones and laptops at home.

China hopes to pull off a successful, coronavirus-free Games that will burnish its international reputation.

But the run-up has been fraught with political controversies including diplomatic boycotts over Beijing’s rights record and worries about the safety of tennis star Peng Shuai, who was not seen for weeks after accusing a former Communist Party leader of sexual assault.

Now, concerns are focusing on whether the tens of thousands of foreign athletes, dignitaries and media workers will be safe from China’s vast array of surveillance tools.

Everyone taking part in the Games will operate in a bubble that separates them from the rest of the population to reduce the chances of the coronavirus spreading into China, which sticks to a strict zero-Covid policy. 

Earlier this week, researchers at the University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab said a virus-monitoring app all attendees must use was found to have a “simple but devastating” encryption flaw that could allow personal data, including health information and voice messages, to leak.

Citizen Lab said it notified Beijing organisers of the issues in early December but received no reply.

“China has a history of undermining encryption technology to perform political censorship and surveillance,” researcher Jeffrey Knockel wrote. 

“As such, it is reasonable to ask whether the encryption in this app was intentionally sabotaged for surveillance purposes or whether the defect was born of developer negligence.”

Canberra-based cybersecurity firm Internet 2.0 also warned in a recent report that official Games software − including a VPN and an anti-virus product − from two of the event’s Chinese tech sponsors could potentially collect troves of user data without their knowledge.

Burner phones

The Beijing Winter Olympic Organising Committee told AFP that cyber-threat allegations “have zero evidence and concerns are totally unnecessary”, adding that “relevant information is only used for the Olympic and Winter Olympic Games”.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has also dismissed the Citizen Lab claims − citing assessments from two unnamed cybersecurity organisations which “confirmed that there are no critical vulnerabilities”.

But such assurances have done little to mollify some Western teams. 

National Olympic associations in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia have advised athletes to leave their personal devices at home and use temporary burner phones, if possible, while in China for the Games.

“We’ve reminded all Team Canada members that the Olympic Games present a unique opportunity for cybercrime,” the Canadian Olympic Committee said in a statement, adding it warned athletes to be “extra diligent”.

Dutch and Belgian media reported last week that their athletes had been given similar advice. Australia will provide its own Wi-Fi for athletes in designated areas, Bloomberg reported.

Some of these countries have joined a growing diplomatic boycott of the Games that has incensed China. Other European nations are unruffled. The Spanish and Italian Olympic committees told AFP they had given no specific advice to athletes on cybersecurity.

‘Uncensored does not mean unmonitored’

China maintains the world’s most sophisticated digital tools to monitor and censor the internet for its citizens − keeping the online world behind a “Great Firewall” and blocking major Western platforms such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube.

It has previously provided uncensored internet access to guests at international events on Chinese soil.

The IOC has said China will give athletes and accredited foreign journalists uncensored internet access through Wi-Fi networks and official SIM cards. 

State-owned China Unicom will provide 5G data SIM cards to incoming foreign journalists, according to an article on the news site of the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology.  

But analysts fear such Wi-Fi networks could still pose potential cybersecurity threats to users, such as surveillance and personal data theft. 

It is common practice for foreign diplomats to leave behind personal phones when visiting China on work trips for the same reasons. 

“It would be a good assumption that connecting to public Wi-Fi in the bubble is not safe − that the Ministry of Public Security and the Ministry of State Security could have access to the data,” said Adam Segal, a cybersecurity expert at the Council on Foreign Relations in New York.

Robert Potter − co-founder of Internet 2.0 − agreed that caution was reasonable, saying that “the surveillance state does not have an exception clause for athletes”.

“Uncensored does not mean unmonitored,” he told AFP. “I don’t know of anyone who has entered China, who has not been subject to some level of electronic surveillance.” – AFP, January 21, 2022

Related News

Sports & Fitness / 3y

IOC to decide on Russia’s participation in 2024 Olympics one year before

Sports & Fitness / 3y

WTA demands ‘private’ meet with Peng Shuai before tour can return to China

World / 4y

Hong Kong jails terminally ill activist for attempted Olympics protest

Sports & Fitness / 4y

‘Ukrainian flag will fly high’, declares Olympics chief Bach

Sports & Fitness / 4y

You don’t have courage to end sanctions against Russian athletes, Lasitskene blasts IOC chief

Sports & Fitness / 4y

Brisbane showing remarkable progress for 2023 Games preparation: IOC president

Spotlight

Malaysia

Anwar congratulates BN on Johor victory, assures federal government support

Malaysia

Johor PRN: BN officially forms state government, wins 29 seats

Malaysia

Malaysia-Thailand open historic border crossing to deepen trade, regional integration

By Ian McIntyre

Malaysia

Gerak Khas drama actress, Tisha Samsir denies drug involvement

Malaysia

Student stabbing: Teenage girl sent to Hospital Bahagia for psychiatric evaluation

Malaysia

Anwar wishes Tun M a happy 101st birthday

World

Israel shares intelligence with US over alleged Iranian plot to assassinate Trump

You may be interested

Sports & Fitness

Merino's late winner sends Spain past Belgium into World Cup semi-finals

Sports & Fitness

Argentina survives Swiss scare to set up blockbuster World Cup semi-final against England

Sports & Fitness

Racism row deepens as Paraguayan Senator claims Instagram hack after Mbappé clash

Sports & Fitness

Bellingham's extra-time brace sends England into first World Cup semi-final since 2018