News

A dark‑web listing claimed 89 million Steam account SMS codes were for sale, but Valve confirms no breach of its systems.
Steam users may be at risk as a reported data breach exposes 89 million account details. Users are urged to change passwords ...
Steam users are urged to change their passwords following reports of a potential data breach affecting 89 million accounts.
Claims that Steam user records have been leaked and being sold on the dark web are likely false, according to cyber experts ...
If you've recently received any one-time password text messages that you did not request, ignore them and change your ...
"It is a good reminder to treat any account security messages that you have not explicitly requested as suspicious" ...
The dark web doesn't have your Steam account on it, Valve has confirmed in a news post after a report on LinkedIn claimed ...
In short, there is no need to change the existing passwords, but Valve used this opportunity to say it’s a good idea to set up the Steam Mobile Authenticator. While 2FA is not enforced for Steam ...
Valve has responded to reports of a major data breach in which Underdark.ai, a cyber threat intelligent service, highlighted ...
A recent Steam security bulletin confirms that hackers have accessed phone numbers and SMS two-factor authentication records ...
Steam owner Valve shot down reports that it's linked to cloud software company Twilio. We asked Valve to confirm whether a ...
The recent news stating that there might be a data breach that affected 89 million Steam accounts raised concern, but the ...