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By David Becker
Posted on ZDNet News: Nov 23, 2004 10:33:00 PM

Game developer Valve is reporting that it has banned more than 20,000 accounts from its Steam online gaming service after detecting attempts to register illegally obtained copies of its hit PC game "Half Life 2."

A Valve representative posting at the company's user forums site said the accounts were scrapped because users either tried to register the game with a pirated CD activation key or open an account with a stolen credit card.

Valve launched the Steam service two years ago to distribute game updates and other content. With "Half Life 2," Valve used the service to distribute early chunks of game code and to register copies of the game via a product activation process, an increasingly common way for software makers to fight piracy.

In a separate posting, the Valve representative advised against buying Steam accounts on eBay, saying most accounts for sale there were stolen or otherwise illegitimate.

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  • Most Recent of 7 Talkback(s)
Actually..
The Doom 3 patch was available before the "official" release date. The funny thing is, the makers of Doom 3 actually supplied the NoCD "patch." If you copied the original exe from the install CD, it would not check to make sure you had a CD.... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Patrick Jones Posted on: 11/25/04 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
the thing i hate about the Steam thing  Monkey_MCSE | 11/23/04
Thats weird...  Stellardyne | 11/23/04
Are you sure it is the right icon?  Patrick Jones | 11/25/04
Not really that many  Robertbrice | 11/23/04
No CD oatches are usually available  Confused by religion | 11/24/04
Actually..  Patrick Jones | 11/25/04
Stuck in the age of the electronic dinosauria !  kmashraf | 11/24/04

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