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Steam Game Pulled From Store After Allegations of Cryptocurrency Mining (polygon.com)

Valve decided to remove a game from Steam after it was found to be turning players' computers into cryptocurrency miners. An anonymous reader shares the report from Polygon: The game is called Abstractism, which was said to not only infiltrate players' computers with mining software, but also dupe them through falsified items on the Steam Marketplace. But not long after these accusations started circulating, it has been taken off Steam. When Abstractism was up on the store, it was marketed as a "relaxing" platformer with a simple design. But YouTuber SidAlpha noticed that something was afoot, when someone on the Team Fortress 2 forums posted about how the game was tied into an item scam.

Players also noticed that the game used massive amounts of CPU and GPU, which Abstractism's developers claimed was because of the game's "high graphics settings," something quite uncharacteristic for a simple platformer. High CPU and GPU usage is another tell-tale sign that a computer is being used to mine cryptocurrency. Just hours after SidAlpha's video and the associated forum posts began to spread, Valve removed Abstractism from Steam, and the developer has been banned from Steam. All previously purchased Abstractism items have been tagged with "This item can no longer be bought or sold on the Community Market."

4 of 26 comments (clear)

  1. Man I'm Steamed... by bobbied · · Score: 2

    Mining currency w/o my permission? Really? It wasn't a good game anyway.

    I'm really steamed about this.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101
  2. Check it out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    While the cache is still up, look at it. In game purchases for Pepe, Putin, and something Russian, developed by who knows who, and only $.50? There are a lot of great, cheap, indie games on Steam, but I've always suspected there were some fishy ones out there too around the fringes. Caveat emptor.

  3. Steam is a app store by The+New+Guy+2.0 · · Score: 2

    Looking at this and the story above in the index, it seems like a lot of app stores are realizing they need to view the code of third-party apps.

  4. What if it were legitimate? by TheNetworkMonkey · · Score: 2

    Maybe that could be a legitimate source of revenue for free-to-play games, if it was a consensual agreement. Gamers typically have high-performance hardware, so why not use excess capability while playing a game, as long as it doesn't interfere with gameplay. Sure, cryptocurrency is generally not worth the electricity it wastes to produce. However, it may be a better alternative to ads or traditional payment schemes.