A gamer seeking financial support for cancer treatment lost $32,000 after downloading from Steam a verified game named Block Blasters that drained his cryptocurrency wallet.
The problem was using Cryptocurrency in the first place.
Submitted 2 days ago by BrikoX@lemmy.zip to gaming@lemmy.zip
A gamer seeking financial support for cancer treatment lost $32,000 after downloading from Steam a verified game named Block Blasters that drained his cryptocurrency wallet.
The problem was using Cryptocurrency in the first place.
I only game on my steamdeck now. And it has practically zero security on it. Admin has no password. When I realized that I then came to the conclusion that Steam doesn’t give a fuck about security.
I tried setting an admin password on it and it broke everything. So it’s in a penalty box on my network and can’t access anything except the outside internet and I do nothing with it but game.
As someone who duly boots linux and windows I feel like you’re bullshitting here or didn’t read manpages and put in a wrong command which you thought did something you wanted but actually fucked up your system
Linux is very easy to break if you want to do it intentionally due to its freedom but I’d you know how to use it correctly it’ll serve you well
Yeah, I have not a clue how they bricked their steam deck just setting a sudo password, its not exactly difficult to set. That, and stuff like SSH is disabled by default on a steam deck.
I was able to change the root password on mine from the terminal in Desktop Mode and have had no issues thus far.
Not sure what you’re talking about, the root password is not set, and that prevents people from being able to log into the account. Pretty standard setup on most computers nowadays where the root password isn’t set on Linux.
And the entire OS is basically reaf only except for a few select folders. So for security, it’s pretty solid. You can’t just install a package on a steam deck, you have to use flatpack to get a package installed, or you have to install a steam game.
You don’t set an admin password on Linux, you use sudo with your normal account’s password if you need to do anything important. It doesn’t work the same way as Windows.
I saw this earlier today, the clip on lsf to be precise.
Modern computing sucks. I remember downloading sketchy shit from astalavista.box.sk all the time, and because of that I had to format c:
several times a year. But these days? Scary stuff. Luckily I don’t have crypto. And while proton on linux simulates a sandboxed windows environment, there’s still free access to root via the Z: drive that wine sets up, so unless one uses the flatpak version which is even more sandboxed, there’s still some potential danger there even as a linux user. It’s just a matter of when.
MurrayL@lemmy.world 2 days ago
The headline and article repeatedly call it a ‘verified Steam game’ but at no point do they explain what that means.
As far as I know, the only verification scheme on Steam is Steam Deck Verified, but the screenshot of the offending game’s store page shows that it was rated as ‘Unknown’.
Do they mean verified as in ‘Valve approved it for release’? Surely not, because every Steam game is approved for release so ‘verified Steam game’ would be a tautology.
Either I’m missing something, or this source is just adding words for no reason.
BrikoX@lemmy.zip 2 days ago
Each game on Steam goes through their approval process. Especially
partner.steamgames.com/steamdirect
MurrayL@lemmy.world 2 days ago
Right, so there’s no such thing as an unverified Steam game because every game has to be approved before it appears on the storefront.
So why does the article repeatedly bother to specify that this was a ‘verified Steam game’? By that metric, they’re all verified.
Kolanaki@pawb.social 1 day ago
I was thinking it was the Deck compatibility or just the fact it was on the store front, as if there is some kind of vetting process to sell your game on it. AFAIK, you just need to agree to their terms and pay ~$100.