Steam'i Yükleyin
giriş
|
dil
简体中文 (Basitleştirilmiş Çince)
繁體中文 (Geleneksel Çince)
日本語 (Japonca)
한국어 (Korece)
ไทย (Tayca)
Български (Bulgarca)
Čeština (Çekçe)
Dansk (Danca)
Deutsch (Almanca)
English (İngilizce)
Español - España (İspanyolca - İspanya)
Español - Latinoamérica (İspanyolca - Latin Amerika)
Ελληνικά (Yunanca)
Français (Fransızca)
Italiano (İtalyanca)
Bahasa Indonesia (Endonezce)
Magyar (Macarca)
Nederlands (Hollandaca)
Norsk (Norveççe)
Polski (Lehçe)
Português (Portekizce - Portekiz)
Português - Brasil (Portekizce - Brezilya)
Română (Rumence)
Русский (Rusça)
Suomi (Fince)
Svenska (İsveççe)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamca)
Українська (Ukraynaca)
Bir çeviri sorunu bildirin
Personally, I wouldn't trust that system unless you do a full system reformat and restore. Completely wipe the drive and install your OS again from scratch. You're not done yet though. Your accounts are also compromised, because you won't know how much data the bad guy got, and you must assume they got everything. This means changing every single password you have for every single log on. Deauthorize any authorized devices. Enable 2FA on everything. Cancel your credit/debit cards and get new ones reissued. You might also want to look into a credit freeze and/or credit monitoring, as they might have ♥♥♥♥♥♥ enough to do some identity theft shenanigans.