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Valve has removed a malicious free-to-play title from Steam after the game's developer "uploaded builds that contained suspected malware."The game in question is PirateFi, which was released on ...
Valve has started to contact suspected victims that they may have been the subject of a cyberattack just days after removing PirateFi from Steam after discovering it contained suspected malware files.
A game called PirateFi released on Steam last week and it contained malware. Valve have removed the game two days ago. Users that played the game have received the following email: pic.twitter.com ...
New Steam game PirateFi was launched onto the Valve store on Thursday February 6, pitched as "a thrilling survival game set in a vibrant, low-poly world where you can choose to play solo or with ...
It seems this 'job' was just a scam to get more people to play the game as part of the induction process for it was to download PirateFI. After being active for six days, Valve took action and ...
After taking down the game, Valve sent users who played PirateFi a message saying that the “Steam account of the developer for this game uploaded builds to Steam that contained suspected malware.” ...
Valve is warning Steam users that an indie developer uploaded builds of its new survival sim game ... PirateFi was a generic survival sim with a similar gameplay loop to Rust but with a Sea of ...
Valve removed a game from its Steam video game platform and store because it contained malware, according to media reports.In its notice to users who downloaded the game, Valve said affected users ...
Valve has removed a malware-infected Free2Play game from its Steam store. The security firm Kaspersky reported this in a recent blog post. The pirate game "PirateFi" was removed from the store ...
Additionally, Valve recommends users to inspect their system for any newly installed software, as this software could be fraudulent and part of the initial malicious files within PirateFi.
Last week, Valve removed a game from its online store Steam because the product was laced with malware.. After the removal of the game, which was called PirateFi, security researchers analyzed the ...
Valve specifically targeted users who played PirateFi (3476470) on Steam “while these builds were active,” stating that it’s “likely” that malicious files launched on victims’ computers.