Zainstaluj Steam
zaloguj się
|
język
简体中文 (chiński uproszczony)
繁體中文 (chiński tradycyjny)
日本語 (japoński)
한국어 (koreański)
ไทย (tajski)
български (bułgarski)
Čeština (czeski)
Dansk (duński)
Deutsch (niemiecki)
English (angielski)
Español – España (hiszpański)
Español – Latinoamérica (hiszpański latynoamerykański)
Ελληνικά (grecki)
Français (francuski)
Italiano (włoski)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonezyjski)
Magyar (węgierski)
Nederlands (niderlandzki)
Norsk (norweski)
Português (portugalski – Portugalia)
Português – Brasil (portugalski brazylijski)
Română (rumuński)
Русский (rosyjski)
Suomi (fiński)
Svenska (szwedzki)
Türkçe (turecki)
Tiếng Việt (wietnamski)
Українська (ukraiński)
Zgłoś problem z tłumaczeniem
Instead, post a status and tell your friends not to click any links you send. Also change your password. If the antivirus doesn't pick anything up you should be okay.
I apologize, this phishing method is still pretty new, so my knowledge about it is pretty limited.
Well i'd make sure you change the passwords after you are sure the PC is clean, as changing now could be useless. If the PC is still infected it could be just grabbing the new information.
These people are all about making money, not playing or getting games.
These groups target everything dealing with online gaming. And of course they document the username and password combinations they find and compile them and sell/distribute them to other groups.
So now your username, password, and likely email, are all documented with these groups. Any account that shared any of those pieces of info is now potentially compromised as well.