- cross-posted to:
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- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
Steam store pages received a new Anti-cheat field. Disclosure is mandatory for kernel-level anti-cheat solutions. And recommended for other anti-cheat solutions (like server-side or non-kernel-level client-side).
The field discloses the anti-cheat product, whether it is a kernel-level installation, and whether it uninstalls with the product or requires manual removal to remove.
A person can choose to install anti-virus software, or to not install it. And they can choose when it runs. So that’s a key difference. The anit-cheat software is not there by choice.
As for not stealing personal information… yeah, I’m sure all the private companies involved from all over the world are very diligently handling this of the data in a highly secure way, and are acting consistently with USA’s very strict privacy laws… Except that the USA doesn’t have strict privacy laws, and the security record of game companies in general is not stellar; and it’s very hard to tell what happens behind your back.
You’re giving the company kernel level access to your computer. That basically means they can do whatever they want. And you can’t really tell if they are behaving themselves beyond them just saying “trust us”. Maybe everything is great. But I wouldn’t count on it.
It is literally installed by choice. It’s part of the game installation. It’s up to users to know what they are installing. Many games likely install lots of things that aren’t immediately obvious.
It doesn’t infiltrate the system.
Except when all you get is an UAC prompt when clicking the play button, without giving you any information, other than that it wants to execute an exe in a temp dir with a random name.