• @[email protected]
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    467 months ago

    It just boggles my mind that there are people who think everyone should give complete control of their computer to Microsoft just because there are people cheating at games.

    This will be my final Windows computer.

      • @[email protected]
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        17 months ago

        Well i already switched and I’m wondering, how does root access works on Linux ? What i mean is there games that used shitty anti cheat that are running on proton have the same access to your PC or is limited by the proton prefix ? Thank you in advance for your input on the matter!

        • @bbuez
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          57 months ago

          Tl;dr : yes they are limited in their access to the rest of your PC… mostly

          From what I understand, when such anticheats are configured for Linux, they’re still running in the user space and is why some developers go as far to disable support for Linux entirely.

          You, the privileged user, unless logged into the root user (not recommended), are part of the “sudoers” group, which allows you to execute commands on behalf of the root user using the “sudo” command which requires your password. Games should never need this to play.

          This however doesn’t mean the AC is sandboxed, its honestly beyond my knowledge exactly what it does have access to, but I can say it is far less than what Windows kernel AC has. And again why developers feeling the need for such intrusion simply pull away from linux

        • @[email protected]
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          17 months ago

          The anticheat can read all your files (in the home directory), and see all running processes. It can’t change much about the system, however, if you give it root once, it can keep it.

  • Max-P
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    327 months ago

    What a dystopian world we live on where my 32 thread CPU with 8 channels of 64GB RAM is “obsolete” for Windows 11, because it lacks a fucking TPM of all things.

    • slazer2au
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      57 months ago

      Blessings in disguise.

    • tb_
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      47 months ago

      The TPM is a feature of the motherboard, not the CPU (generally).

      You can even get separate TPM modules to plug into your MoBo, if I’m not mistaken.

    • @Aux
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      37 months ago

      Just plug a TPM module in your motherboard. TPM 2.0 is ten years old, how old is your motherboard for fox sake?

  • @edgemaster72
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    297 months ago

    The bar should be a little higher than “we haven’t bricked anyone’s system (that we know of) (so far)”

    • @pivot_root
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      7 months ago

      “We might have installed a root kit on your system, but now you can enjoy being told to kill yourself while knowing that guy who is ganking you at every opportunity isn’t cheating but is merely just better than you!”