Well yeah of course it’s optional already. If you don’t want that then you just don’t buy those games.
Comment on Valve Addresses Steam Machine Anti-Cheat Concerns, Says It's Working Towards Support
demizerone@lemmy.world 18 hours ago
Please make this optional. I’d rather not have any third party kernel modules mucking around in my OS. I don’t use anything the requires this.
echodot@feddit.uk 18 hours ago
FooBarrington@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
Currently kernel-level anti cheat isn’t available for Linux, so games that are released with multiplayer support don’t require it (e.g. games that enable Linux support in EAC).
If kernel-level anti cheat is supported by Valve, many of those games will start requiring it. So if you don’t want kernel stuff, there’s a real chance this development will reduce the number of available games in the future.
flamiera@kbin.melroy.org 12 hours ago
Except people are going to still buy those games, still complain for something to be done and when the potential resolution is there, they'll go "I DON'T WANT IT!" and just cycle through.
Fuck sakes, some people...
mushroomman_toad@lemmy.dbzer0.com 8 hours ago
The article only mentions TPM not 3rd party modules. I’m guessing the idea is that you will have to run an approved kernel.
rmrf@lemmy.ml 7 hours ago
Kernel modules can be installed, loaded, and run without a reboot in Linux. TPM support would just ensure that the firmware/kernel and modules loaded at boot are expected.
mushroomman_toad@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 hours ago
Yeah, unless valve starts restricting root access when secure boot is enabled, you’re probably right.
systemglitch@lemmy.world 9 hours ago
It is optional what games you purchase and install