June 15, 2016 By Simon Smith 2 min read

There can’t be many London districts with such an evocative link to sport as Wimbledon. The name conjures up images of grass, rackets and, of course, strawberries and cream. The All England Lawn Tennis Club hosts the oldest and one of the most watched tournaments in the world. The standards of play are of the highest caliber, and everything about the event has to match. The value of the brand is commensurate with that.

In this increasingly digital era, that high standard also applies to the digital experience of fans using tournament sites to keep up with scores and news. That experience has to be both seamless and flawless. Yet as we become increasingly digital, the threats to the platform keep on increasing. We must defend against these risks if we hope to protect both an online presence and a reputation.

IBM and Wimbledon Form a Doubles Pair

During the 2016 tournament, IBM Security will detect and block thousands of suspicious security events on the Wimbledon platform to ensure this seamless experience for users. The scale of the task is immense: In 2015, in the lead-up to the tournament, we saw a 300 percent increase in blocked security attacks. During the tournament itself, we experienced a 500 percent increase. Even more significantly, in April 2016, we witnessed a 1,500 percent increase in security incidents blocked on our sporting platforms.

Sport has been a huge driver in the development of the internet and its supporting technologies. So many people now experience an event in a digital environment, which provides not only coverage, but also statistics, news and additional information. We expect this information to be readily available to enhance our experience, and perhaps more critically, we expect it to be fast, reliable and always on. As consumers expect more, the platforms deployed change and the attacks evolve. It is a continuous cycle of development.

IBM secures these sporting platforms by leveraging the IBM Cloud, the same platform that we use for our own IBM site. This allows for rapid deployment, integration and availability as well as massive increases in scale. We deploy a defense-in-depth approach that is needed to protect against well-funded, well-organized and motivated attackers.

Serving an Ace With the Right Security Products

The Wimbledon website is protected by multiple security products, at the core of which is the IBM Security QRadar SIEM. This consolidates log source event data from thousands of devices, endpoints and applications distributed throughout a network, performing immediate normalization and correlation activities on raw data to distinguish real threats from false positives.

IBM Security QRadar also consolidates IBM Security X-Force Threat Intelligence, which supplies a list of potentially malicious IP addresses including malware hosts, spam sources and other threats. It correlates system vulnerabilities with event and network data, helping to prioritize security incidents.

So enjoy the tournament knowing that IBM is working around the clock to keep the digital platform secure. Just don’t have too much cream with your strawberries.

Find out more about how IBM secures Wimbledon

More from

Cybersecurity trends: IBM’s predictions for 2025

4 min read - Cybersecurity concerns in 2024 can be summed up in two letters: AI (or five letters if you narrow it down to gen AI). Organizations are still in the early stages of understanding the risks and rewards of this technology. For all the good it can do to improve data protection, keep up with compliance regulations and enable faster threat detection, threat actors are also using AI to accelerate their social engineering attacks and sabotage AI models with malware.AI might have…

Cloud threat report: Why have SaaS platforms on dark web marketplaces decreased?

3 min read - IBM’s X-Force team recently released the latest edition of the Cloud Threat Landscape Report for 2024, providing a comprehensive outlook on the rise of cloud infrastructure adoption and its associated risks.One of the key takeaways of this year’s report was focused on the gradual decrease in Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) platforms being mentioned across dark web marketplaces. While this trend potentially points to more cloud platforms increasing their defensive posture and limiting the number of exploits or compromised credentials that are surfacing,…

Mobile device security: Why protection is critical in the hybrid workforce

4 min read - In our mobile-first/mobile-last world, many employees’ work days both start and end on a mobile device. Mobile devices are now essential tools for productivity and communication. As many organizations transition to hybrid work environments, mobile devices offer a rich target for malicious actors because they are often the least protected corporate devices and offer platforms from which to launch social engineering attacks.Unlike traditional computers, which are generally well-defended with antivirus software and cybersecurity protocols, mobile devices are frequently left vulnerable…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today