The past year has caused an explosion in the games industry, but that explosion has caused several secondary explosions in the cheat-making market. Aimbots, wallhacks, and other forms of cheat software 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:is big business these days, which has forced the industry to renew its focus on 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:combating cheaters.

Except for Valve, apparently. The Dota 2 and CS:GO maker has been reportedly sitting on a massive Source Engine vulnerability for the past two yeཧars.

This report comes courtesy of , a "not-for-pไrofit reverse-engineering group" that looks into publicly available software and publishes vulnerabilities under the expectation that the software developer fixes those vulnerabilities. Recently, the group posted a video on Twitter showing how someone can gain remote access to someone else's computer just by exploiting that Source Engine vulnerability.

The specifics of the vulnerability were not disclosed, but The Secret Club 🌟did make it clear that🥃 on the victim's end, all they need to do is accept an invitation to play a Source Engine game on Steam. After that, the hacker has full access to the victim's PC to do with as they please.

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Strangely, The Secret Club is also saying that Valve is preventing them from publishing the details of this vulnerability even though they've known about it for two years. And i🀅f they've known about i༺t that long, then it's a certainty that less scrupulous hackers know about it too.

On top of that, Valve still hasn't fixed the exploit themselves even though༺ The Secret Club told them about it years ago.

All we can suggest for now is that Steam users only accept invitations to play games from known friends and to be 🧸especially careful when aꦬccept game invites to Source Engine games.

Just remember that cheaters can get scammed just as easily as legit players. 168澳洲幸运5开奖网:A recent Activision Blizzard report describes how Warzone cheaters were unwittingly downloading trojans onto their machines disguised as Warzoཧne hacks. The worst part? People were even paying subscription prices for the privilege of having their computers hacked.

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