安裝 Steam
登入
|
語言
簡體中文
日本語(日文)
한국어(韓文)
ไทย(泰文)
Български(保加利亞文)
Čeština(捷克文)
Dansk(丹麥文)
Deutsch(德文)
English(英文)
Español - España(西班牙文 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙文 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希臘文)
Français(法文)
Italiano(義大利文)
Bahasa Indonesia(印尼語)
Magyar(匈牙利文)
Nederlands(荷蘭文)
Norsk(挪威文)
Polski(波蘭文)
Português(葡萄牙文 - 葡萄牙)
Português - Brasil(葡萄牙文 - 巴西)
Română(羅馬尼亞文)
Русский(俄文)
Suomi(芬蘭文)
Svenska(瑞典文)
Türkçe(土耳其文)
tiếng Việt(越南文)
Українська(烏克蘭文)
回報翻譯問題
Basically, if you got a notification, it means someone successfully logged in with your password, but was stopped by the authenticator.
You may want to change the passwords of your steam account and/or emails.
I carry my laptop on me and I leave Steam on in the background. When I walked into a coffee shop Steam sent me the verification code. Could it be my laptop trying to log into Steam through unverified networks?
Edit: I did a scan and there are no threats found. I've logged into tons of non-Steam accounts with no issues either. I never use browser Steam so there's no way I could've gotten phished. It must've been a brute force app that found out my password.
Geez. Talk about a necrobump lmfao.
But yep, changing my password way back then stopped the issue. My most reasonable guess was that someone managed to brute force guess my password but got held up by the Steam Guard. Just make a more secure password and thank Gabe for 2FA.
Brute forcing isn't feasible considering after X tries, the person is locked out and on a cooldown for too many tries. It would take more than your life expectancy to even brute into some of the easiest passwords.
Maybe they got it from a data breach. Not sure if '17 was a big year for breaches but I know that I had a bad habit of using the same password on most accounts around the time that this happened.
Nope.