![]() With offered products (games) and flagged (false) positive behaviour from several so called security software are always seen on a case by case base But in the end the linkfilter in Steam is useless in this case.Įspecially this can be dangerous when other sites take over content published on Steam like SteamDB and there are many more examples from hijacked or unmaintained websites from publishers and developers around here. At times completely down, now normal content seems to be presented. Since the screenshot was made last year, the appearance of the domain changed a few times. As example publisher sites on storepages which leading to malicious content, Steam overlay as tool for advertising, analytics and tracking campaigns (hello Paradox Interactive, AB and Creative Assembly/Sega Games Co., Ltd.) and some smaller annoyances leaving the customers often here with a big unknown factor. So the answer could be get older and get a job. ![]() That being said they can just say no regardless of how weak their justifications are. A lot of effort goes into maintaining data integrity, and with a large user base like Steam's anything would be caught and reported in minutes because there's plenty of software developers and security experts among the userbase. You generally won't see viruses or malware in games from legitimate sources. What should I tell them? I say its safe but for them, it's not. My parents think the computer will be compromised by malware and everything and all of our data, passwords, pictures because of Steam. They have very classified info on it and I downloaded Steam on it few months ago. ![]() ![]() My parents have a computer that's very fast unlike my laptop which is slow. Originally posted by OxiClean:I've been using Steam for 4 years and never came across a virus from downloading games. ![]()
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