@Linux @LawChan @gamingonlinux its not true.
EDIT: As far as I am aware.
@Linux @LawChan @gamingonlinux its not true.
EDIT: As far as I am aware.
@Linux @regalcapybara843 @LawChan there is absolutely nothing actually confirmed
@regalcapybara843 @LawChan @gamingonlinux
Source, outside of Twitter or BlueSky?
@seyon @Linux or we just don't overreact to every single stupid thing that gets posted online that may or may not be true
@Linux I bet if it was another company people wouldn't wait for confirmation.
@gamingonlinux @regalcapybara843 @LawChan
Which is why, even if this ends up being someone's idea of a bad joke and turned out to be a false flag, I would still suggest people review their security. -- There is no harm in being cautious.
@gamingonlinux @seyon @Linux Even if this ends up being a false flag, changing your password to something longer (or in some cases something more random) is a good practice.
@lazalatin @seyon https://www.gamingonlinux.com/2025/05/heres-a-statement-from-valve-on-the-reported-steam-data-breach/
@seyon I beg to differ: the benefit of changing passwords or MFA factor very much depends on ones risk assessment and possible attack vectors. For most people using MFA and using strong passwords generated and stored in ones password manager is more than enough. No need to regularly change them, besides of confirmed data breaches or stolen credentials, IMHO @gamingonlinux
@gamingonlinux @Linux changing our passwords and updating our MFA isn't a overreaction. It's something we should do regularly, but we just do this after getting a data breach report. Again let's not forget that breached companies do take their time to confirm the data breach.
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