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77,000 Steam accounts hacked every month

If you thought Valve was being dramatic in its implementation of three-day-waits for loss-making item trades on Steam, think again. In a long-form blog explaining just why it pushed for two factor authentication and new protective measures for trades between Steam accounts, Valve revealed that as many as 77,000 people have their accounts broken into every month.

I'm sure many of you are doing now what Valve did too for some time: assuming that the people who's accounts are being exploited are the naive and new. They don't have decent security in place, or a strong password, you might think. While that certainly does make up a portion of those affected, there are also many other, very experienced users who are also targeted.

Professional gamers are some of the most common, popular streamers and well-known item traders are also commonly attacked. The reasoning is that those accounts have quite a lot of valuable items in them and information about the person and the account are a little more easily obtained due to their public persona.

trades

Then their accounts are compromised and items traded away before anything can be done. Valve is able to reimburse the items to the original owner, but that devalues the entire marketplace. Hence why Valve is now pushing for everyone to use the two factor system or deal with the trade delay.

There are some caveats of course. You don't need to login with the authenticator app or check your email every day, just for the previous seven days, to avoid the trade halt. Also if you have been friends with the person you're trading with for over a year, then the trade delay is only 24 hours.

For those that still aren't happy, consider that Valve almost removed the trade-feature entirely. There are too many people negatively affected by account theft to not do something, but enough people like to send items to friends and family that it couldn't just drop it. This is the lesser of two evils.

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KitGuru Says: Do you guys use the trading feature much? It's not something I've ever dabbled in but I'm not much of a badge builder.

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4 comments

  1. 77,000 Steam accounts hacked every month since when? Is it an average of this year?

  2. Going by how many peoples have steam this isn’t a lot, probably 1% of the users. Many of these users are probably young or neglect good security. Young peoples tend to trust others easily, which results in giving away valuable information while those with a bad security can easily get hacked. Then you have peoples that believe free software on the internet gives them free goodies on steam, while they are just being keylogged.

    This happens at any game where wealth is involved as ingame currency, for example cosmetics etc. Platforms also have the same issue such as steam. Others have it too, but steam just released the numbers unlike many others do.

  3. This still does not answer my question. Where are the sources from this article…

  4. Ya know.. you could’ve even googled this to find it within 10 seconds. But obviously the source is valve itself.

    http://store.steampowered.com/news/19618/