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A leak of old text messages sent to Steam customers with one-time codes for logins was “not a breach of Steam systems,” Valve ...
Valve has addressed Steam's security breach reported earlier this week, a leak which allegedly involved over 89 million user records. Fortunately, it apparently isn't as bad as it initially seemed.
As for how and where the leak originated, it's unclear; Valve says it wasn't a Steam breach, and Underdark.ai claimed it was from the cloud communications company Twilio that supposedly handles ...
Following reports of a Steam data leak over the weekend, Valve has investigated the issue and issued a statement to firstly refute reports that this is a breach of their systems, and to reassure ...
Valve just put out a straightforward update on that recent claim about millions of Steam records leaking. They’ve dived into all the logs and confirmed that nothing in their backend was actually ...
A user claimed to have found data from millions of Steam accounts on sale Valve said it was investigating the source of the leak Leaked data included older texts with one-time authentication codes ...
Valve says the leak features phone numbers that previously received a one-time passcode, but they're not associated with a ...
Valve, the company behind Steam, has confirmed that there has been no data breach. A major scare hit the gaming world this week when a hacker claimed to have stolen the personal data of over 89 ...
Valve announced on its official Steam Support page that no breach of Steam systems had occurred. There was a leak of some older text messages that contained a few one-time codes for two-factor ...