![]() ![]() Will having the game installed be risky ? UPDATE : There is a high chance they were fake. How about the posts showcasing RCEs affecting TF2 clients ? Needless to say, non-Source games are safe too.So far, I got nothing, but if one's out, I'll update the post. Other multiplayer Source games should be safe unless a RCE exploit found within the leaks can be transferred across games (for example, by shared source code), you're connecting to a multiplayer server and the active exploiter with the active exploit joins your game.Singleplayer games are 100% safe, even on Source.If there was an exploit there, that means Valve servers got hacked, and we have a much bigger problem. Offline gaming, on your own LAN server, is 100% safe : you don't connect to servers in the process and you can physically yell at the cheaters if you play with local friends.I really can't make a 100% assumption on that one, but the rule of thumb is : Refer to this page for contacting Valve about security matters. I have important informations about the leak ! As said earlier, even this will peter out with updates. UPDATE 3 : TF2 confirmed not to be affected outside of potentially shared code being used for cheat development. UPDATE 2 : According to the earlier source, TF2 may be confirmed not to be affected by the leak at all. ![]() If you're a coder, find out one of those exploits, can craft a PoC but decide to not exploit it for evil, head over to this link : you may get rewarded. I'd expect future updates to stamp it out fast, though.ĭo note that for an exploit to impact you, it requires you to be playing on an online server and on the same one as an exploiter with an active exploit on hand : either of those conditions missing means you're safe. With the full source code release, it's highly possible that cheat developers will use those to develop cheats and/or exploits based on unfixed glitches. If you have further informations, feel free to share. The news was forwarded internally, so they probably already know about it. From this review, we have not found any reason for players to be alarmed or avoid the current builds. UPDATE : Official word on the CS:GO side of things : We have reviewed the leaked code and believe it to be a reposting of a limited CS:GO engine code depot released to partners in late 2017, and originally leaked in 2018. UPDATE 3 : TF2 source confirmed not leaked : what filtered is really just shared code with the CS:GO leak. UPDATE 2 : Team Fortress 2 source code may not have leaked after all according to the source below. For TF2, the codebase seems to be dated around the time of Jungle Inferno's release. The source code for TF2 and CS:GO was apparently leaked to the public.
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