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Rapporter et problem med oversettelse
New software can be 'unknown' to an anti-cheat, and could operate for a few days (perhaps even weeks or months, in the cases of private, single-user software) before the anti-cheat is updated to identify those softwares. Subtle, single-user cheat software might never be detected, if the user is careful. As an example, some kind of overlay to tell you where sounds are coming from might be impossible for an anti-cheat to detect, if it was privately coded and operated.
As not all software is used for cheating, it can be very hard for an anti-cheat to correctly identify new cheats over some silly overlay, like, say, Discord. As a result, anti-cheats don't act, as they won't ban without 'evidence'.
"Innocent until proven guilty" and all.
In a way, an anti-cheat is like an anti-virus. It just looks out for software that messes with a specific application, rather than your computer.