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University of Texas at Dallas computer scientists have devised a new weapon against video game players who cheat.
TF2 Bot Detector calls a votekick against bots (and select human cheaters) on your team. If they are on the other team, sends a chat message telling the other team to kick their cheater. Will this get me VAC banned? It does not modify the game or OS memory in any way. Everytime a hack is injected into a game it changes or adds some coding that should not be there, i would think vac scans the game coding to detect anything out of the ordinary. I would also assume they double maybe even triple check the 'scan' if a positive for changed coding does appear.
The researchers developed their approach for detecting cheaters using the popular first-person shooter game Counter-Strike. But the mechanism can work for any massively multiplayer online (MMO) game that sends data traffic to a central server.
Their research was published online in IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing.
Counter-Strike is a series of games in which players work in teams to counter terrorists by securing plant locations, defusing bombs and rescuing hostages. Players can earn in-game currency to buy more powerful weapons, which is a key to success. Various software cheats for the game are available online.
“Sometimes when you’re playing against players who use cheats you can tell, but sometimes it may not be evident,” said Md Shihabul Islam, a UT Dallas computer science doctoral student in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science and lead author of the study, who plays Counter-Strike for fun. “It’s not fair to the other players.”
In addition to fair play, cheating also can have an economic impact when dissatisfied players leave to play other games, Islam said.
Cheating incidents also can have serious consequences in esports, a fast-growing industry with annual revenues close to $1 billion. Cheating can result in sanctions against teams and players, including disqualification, forfeiture of prize money and a ban on future participation, according to the Esports Integrity Commission based in the United Kingdom.
Detecting cheating in MMO games can be challenging because the data that goes from a player’s computer to the game server is encrypted. Previous research has relied on decrypted game logs to detect cheating after the fact. The UT Dallas researchers’ approach eliminates the need for decrypted data and instead analyzes encrypted data traffic to and from the server in real time.
“Players who cheat send traffic in a different way,” said Dr. Latifur Khan, an author of the study, professor of computer science and director of the Big Data Analytics and Management Lab at UT Dallas. “We’re trying to capture those characteristics.”
“After detection, we can give a warning and gracefully kick the player out if they continue with the cheating during a fixed time interval. Our aim is to ensure that games like Counter-Strike remain fun and fair for all players.”
— Dr. Latifur Khan, professor of computer science in the Erik Jonsson School of Engineering and Computer Science
For the study, 20 students in the UT Dallas class Cyber Security Essentials for Practitioners downloaded Counter-Strike and three software cheats: an aimbot, which automatically targets an opponent; a speed hack, which allows the player to move faster; and a wallhack, which makes walls transparent so players can easily see their opponent. The researchers set up a server dedicated to the project so the students’ activity would not disrupt other online players.
The researchers analyzed game traffic to and from the dedicated server. Data travels in packets, or bundles, of information. The packets can be different sizes, depending on the contents. Researchers analyzed features, including the number of incoming and outgoing packets, their size, the time they were transmitted, their direction and the number of packets in a burst, which is a group of consecutive packets.
By monitoring the data traffic from the student players, researchers identified patterns that indicated cheating. They then used that information to train a machine-learning model, a form of artificial intelligence, to predict cheating based on patterns and features in the game data.
The researchers adjusted their statistical model, based on a small set of gamers, to work for larger populations. Part of the cheat-detection mechanism involves sending the data traffic to a graphics processing unit, which is a parallel server, to make the process faster and take the workload off the main server’s central processing unit.
The researchers plan to extend their work to create an approach for games that do not use a client-server architecture and to make the detection mechanism more secure. Islam said gaming companies could use the UT Dallas technique with their own data to train gaming software to detect cheating. If cheating is detected, the system could take immediate action.
“After detection,” Khan said, “we can give a warning and gracefully kick the player out if they continue with the cheating during a fixed time interval.
“Our aim is to ensure that games like Counter-Strike remain fun and fair for all players.”
Reference: “GCI: A GPU Based Transfer Learning Approach for Detecting Cheats of Computer Game” by Md Shihabul Islam, Bo Dong, Swarup Chandra, Latifur Khan and Bhavani M. Thuraisingham, 3 August 2020, IEEE Transactions on Dependable and Secure Computing.
DOI: 10.1109/TDSC.2020.3013817
Other authors of the study include Swarup Chandra PhD’18, a research engineer at Hewlett Packard Enterprise, and UT Dallas computer science doctoral student Bo Dong. Dr. Bhavani Thuraisingham, Founders Chair in Engineering and Computer Science, professor of computer science and executive director of the Cyber Security Research and Education Institute at UT Dallas, is senior author of the study.
The research was funded by the National Science Foundation, Air Force Office of Scientific Research, National Security Agency, IBM and Hewlett-Packard Development Co.
Over the weekend, Call of Duty's publisher, Activision, filed a lawsuit against CxCheats, a site that sells downloadable cheats to help you find and kill other players extremely easily.
The lawsuit is based on the fact that creating and using cheats in CoD violates Activision's Terms of Use.
Activision has banned players for cheating, but this legal action seems like a more thorough scare tactic to try to cut down on the whole culture of hacking, which many claim ruins the fun of first person shooters.
But while CxCheats is no longer offering hacks, or at least not for the time being, there's plenty of other sites still selling any and every cheat under the sun.
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So how much do these hacks cost, and more importantly, which sites are legit (and won't either rip you off or give your computer a virus)?
Here's the most recent information on all the best cheat providers currently in operation.
[NOTE: Using any of these cheats is still against the policy of the game publishers and may result in you being banned.
These sites can also easily take your money and run, so BE CAREFUL FOR SCAMS.
But no one's perfect, so if you wanna feel like a god with a rifle for a few hours a week, we won't judge you.]
EngineOwning
After combing through many reviews, this site seems to be your best bet for getting aimbot, ESP, wallhacks, and any other superpower you want to play around with.
They offer downloadable cheats for Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, Battlefield V, Titanfall 2, and many more titles in those series.
For Modern Warfare, they offer aimbot, triggerbot, and ESP, which each come with a slew of settings you can customize to give even the worst players the best chance of slaughtering fools.
They also claim to help protect you against being detected for cheating and let you hide the cheats if you want to record your gameplay.
Their pricing starts at $6 for a three-day pass, $24 for a 30-day pass, and $48 for a 90-day pass.
On the review site TrustPilot, EngineOwning has the highest rating and most positive user feedback of all the cheat providers we looked at.
Battlelog
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This is one of the most comprehensive and easy to find sources for cheats, but it also appears to be a huge scam.
While they offer hacks for an impressive list of games—besides CoD they cover PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds, Apex Legends, Rainbow Six Siege, Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, and the new Rogue Company—they have terrible reviews.
People on Facebook, reddit, and ReportScam all claim to have paid for cheats that Battlelog never delivered, then never got their refunds.
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Battlelog's prices also tend to be higher than EngineOwning's.
For PUBG you can get a 30-day pass for $120 or a seven-day pass for $60. Although if you just want to test drive it you can pay $12 for 24 hours.
Their Modern Warfare and Warzone downloads are $140 for 30 days, $60 for seven days, or the same $12 for just one day.
No matter how 'legit' their site looks, be careful before giving your credit card number to these folks.
PerfectAim
If you don't care about besting kids in CoD, this site might be up your alley.
PerfectAim sells cheats for 22 different games and has has decent reviews on TrustPilot, but not many people are out there actively recommending them so it's hard to tell how legit they really are.
They offer the same standard aimbot and ESP packages, although they don't have different tiers of hacks so you have fewer options overall.
On the plus side, they're one of the more affordable options. You can cheat through Battlefield V for $19 per month, $38 for three months, or $57 for a whole year.
Apex Legends and Rogue Company only have one $29 per month option, while Rainbow Six Siege has the same for $38 monthly. However, hacks for Counter-Strike: Global Offensive are as cheap as $7 per month and $29 annually.
The signs for PerfectAim point in the right direction, but sometimes something that looks too good to be true is.
IWantCheats
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The people behind this site have done an amazing job to make their business look as legit as possible. Or at least as legit as an illegal cheat retailer can look.
Review sites like TrustPilot and Reviews.io give them nearly perfect reviews from seemingly real users, but the discussion in forums is that they're one of the biggest cheat scammers on the market.
It's easy to see their appeal. They offer cheats for over 80 games and are even advertising upcoming cheats for Call of Duty: Black Ops Cold War before the game has been released.
Their prices also seem to be relatively competitive—$27 for 30 days—so everything they offer makes you want to click purchase (if you're so inclined to cheat).
But their reputation in real communities is a big red flag, so just know you're taking a gamble if you go with them.
And in case you need the reminder, all of these cheat sites can easily scam you out of your money. So if you really want to get your shots off, just stop whining and try practicing more.