• hand
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    472 months ago

    Not sure I agree, how else are they meant to prevent the ocean of “It wasn’t me, it was my brother” excuses from hackers smurfing accounts?

    I’d recommend (to everyone) that if you’re unsure -or have even the slightest doubt about the person you’re going to give access to your Steam account- to politely decline and play it safe.

    • MrScottyTay
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      2 months ago

      They should know the account it is that’s currently using it. They’re not using your account when playing your games

      • arefx
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        2 months ago

        Bro you can just make a fake account and say it was your little brother , they literally have no idea who signed up or if they lied about account details 🙄

      • hand
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        182 months ago

        Unless I’ve misunderstood; that’s exactly why I asked the question in my original comment. I’ll explain my / the reasoning:

        I own a game on a Steam account (A) and want to hack (and evade bans) using another Steam account (B).

        I share my library/game from account (A) to account (B) then hack on account B and only account B gets banned… What’s to then stop me from making Steam account C, D, E, F… etc? Absolutely nothing. Hence the double ban.

        I stress that if you do share a game / your Steam library with others you trust them explicitly.

        • @brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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          -32 months ago

          Restrict the number of accounts that can join that family group. And/or remove the ability to share the library from the main account for repeated offenses.

          Or require multiple family members accounts to have to cheat before the owner account is banned.