Saturday, November 23, 2024

Cybersecurity Experts Concerns Over 2022 Beijing Olympics app

A group of cybersecurity experts have voiced their concerns over the Beijing Olympics 2022 App. Security holes have been discovered, the app named “My2022” was developed in China and is a requirement for the event

With less than three weeks ahead of the Beijing 2022 Olympics, February 4th is the opening ceremony, cyber security researchers at the University of Toronto have voiced concerns today about potential risks from the app that all participants of the games are required to have installed.

App Requirement

All participants of the games, including Athletes, Journalists, Sports Officials and even Visitors are expected to download this app and use it before arriving at the people’s republic.

The app is supposed to monitor the health of everyone participating in the winter games in Beijing, for people who will be arriving from abroad like team Canada, they are required to start inputting health data 14 days before arriving in China, the app is allegedly monitoring things like fevers, coughs headaches sore throats and the like.

MY2022 Is more than just a health app, it also has a Visitor Guide and has a Chat Function that allows users to exchange messages and files, this is where the biggest issue lies.

CitizenLab at the University of Toronto, a group of cybersecurity researchers have pointed towards the MY2022’s encryption certificate.

Sensitive Data

The flaw they say, leaves the information of users vulnerable, meaning they could be accessed by a third party and manipulated, users of this application could potentially connect to someone intercepting this traffic. The traffic could be read, modified, responses from the server could be changed.

Recommended:  Employees Have Access to an Average of 10 Million Files

So-Called Illegal Words

Beyond that, a list of restricted words was found, the text file containing a list of so-called illegal words which includes, “Uyghur” “Tibetan” “Tiananmen” and “Dalai Lama”. A further function was reported that allows other users to expose a chat or message that might be considered politically sensitive in the people’s republic.

What did the IOC and Chinese state media say

The IOC media team said:

The IOC has conducted independent third-party assessments on the application from two cyber-security testing organizations. These reports confirmed that there are no critical vulnerabilities.

IOC Media Team

The Chinese State Media said:

MY2022 has been scrutinized by Google, Apple and Samsung and all personal information they say will be encrypted to ensure privacy.

Chinese State Media

Germany, Australia The UK and The US are all advising their athletes to leave personal electronics like phones and laptops at home, and The Dutch team, they have told their team to not bring any personal phones whatsoever because they are very much concerned about surveillance.

Enjoyed this article? Why not subscribe to our Weekly Cybersecurity Newsletter?

Got to Cybersecurity News

Go to Homepage

Go to Cybersecurity Academy

You may also enjoy reading, The definitions of “recently” and “discovered” leave a lot to be desired

Bookmark
Please login to bookmarkClose
Share the word, let's increase Cybersecurity Awareness as we know it
- Sponsored -

Sponsored Offer

Unleash the Power of the Cloud: Grab $200 Credit for 60 Days on DigitalOcean!

Digital ocean free 200

Discover more infosec

Steven Black (n0tst3)
Hello! I'm Steve, an independent security researcher, and analyst from Scotland, UK. I've had an avid interest in Computers, Technology and Security since my early teens. 20 years on, and, it's a whole lot more complicated... I've assisted Governments, Individuals and Organizations throughout the world. Including; US DOJ, NHS UK, GOV UK. I'll often reblog infosec-related articles that I find interesting. On the RiSec website, You'll also find a variety of write-ups, tutorials and much more!

more infosec reads

Subscribe for weekly updates

explore

more

security