The FA has written a letter to soccer's
governing body FIFA expressing its concerns about sensitive
information such as injuries, strategies and tactics being
leaked before matches during the World Cup, British newspapers
said.
England players and staff have been advised not to use public
Wi-Fi in Russia, including the connections provided at the team
hotel.
According to media reports, the FA has also strengthened
firewalls, introduced encrypted passwords and have strict
guidelines for players regarding social media.
The FA could not immediately be reached for comment.
England, who lead Group F with 20 points, can seal their
participation in the World Cup with a win over Slovenia in their
penultimate qualifying match at Wembley on Oct. 5.
Hacking group Fancy Bears in August leaked anti-doping
information regarding footballers and said more than 150 players
failed drug tests in 2015. Athletics governing body the IAAF
said in April it had suffered a cyber attack that it believed
compromised information about athletes' medical records.
The group has been linked by Western governments and security
experts to a Russian spy agency blamed for some of the cyber
operations during the 2016 U.S. election. Russia has denied
meddling in the election.
"We can confirm the FA has sent a letter to FIFA related to the
Fancy Bears attack. In its reply, FIFA has informed the FA that
(it) remains committed to preventing security attacks in
general," a FIFA spokesman was quoted as saying by British
media.
"With respect to the Fancy Bears attack in particular, it is
presently investigating the incident to ascertain whether FIFA's
infrastructure was compromised," the spokesman added.
The spokesman was quoted as saying FIFA was relying on expert
advice from third parties on computer security.
"It is for this reason that FIFA cannot and does not provide any
computer security advice to third parties," the spokesman said.
(Reporting by Aditi Prakash in Bengaluru; Editing by Alison
Williams)
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