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https://steamcommunity.com/my/tradeoffers/
There is a bug on mobile app, which may bring up error for like confirming selling on market, or trades. So just check your history this way you know for sure if it gone though for trade.
For getting message saying you logged in from a new device, that means you login from a new device it doesn't recognize.
https://support.steampowered.com/kb_article.php?ref=1047-edfm-2932#newdevice
Worst case if you by chance login on a 3rd party website that you thought it was steam, because this is a popular scam thing scammers do is trick people into using their phishing site, to trick you into trading your items. If you see something off here, then you know for sure what going on.
https://help.steampowered.com/en/accountdata/SteamLoginHistory
Can find this by Steam help page > My account > Data related to my account > Recent Login History.
If you did see someone login on your account, or magically your display name, display picture, and profile bio change saying ban, or telling you to do something then it's a scam as well because the person on the account trying to get you to trade the items off the account to them, waiting on you to confirm the trade.
If you did have someone on your account you follow these steps, and don't skip any.
1. Scan for malware https://www.malwarebytes.com/
2. Deauthorize all other devices https://store.steampowered.com/twofactor/manage
3. Change passwords from a clean computer
4. Generate new backup codes for your Mobile App https://store.steampowered.com/twofactor/manage
5. Revoke the API key https://steamcommunity.com/dev/apikey (there should be nothing in the APIKEY)
Most common reason people get accounts hijack for any service really are as followed.
- Sharing account infomation with others. <--- Very common with impersonators, pretending to be Steam admin / support.
- Logging in on phishing sites. <--- Very common with skin gambling sites.
- Downloading / Installing Virus / Keylogger on your system.
- Using public devices that has keyloggers, such as cyber cafe, school computers, and etc...
- Storing your login credentials on a unsecured service that others has access to view.
- Using same login credentials for all your things, or using same login credentials on another service that had a data leak. Yes it does matter because even if it not related to Steam, if using same login credentials, hijackers will try to use those credentials to see what services you use with those credentials. https://haveibeenpwned.com/