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  2. Grand Theft Auto modding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Theft_Auto_modding

    FiveM, an alternative multiplayer and role-playing modification for Grand Theft Auto Online, amassed a concurrent player count of 250,000 on Steam in April 2021, surpassing that of the base game. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] Earlier in February, Grand Theft Auto V became the most-watched category on Twitch due to an update for NoPixel, one of FiveM 's largest ...

  3. Cheating in online games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheating_in_online_games

    The server will be very fast, but any wallhack program will reveal where all the players in the game are, what team they are on, and what state they are in — health, weapon, ammo etc. At the same time, altered and erroneous data from a client will allow a player to break the game rules, manipulate the server, and even manipulate other clients.

  4. BattlEye - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BattlEye

    BattlEye is a proprietary anti-cheat software designed to detect players that hack or abusively use exploits in an online game.It was initially released as a third-party anti-cheat for Battlefield Vietnam in 2004 and has since been officially implemented in numerous video games, primarily shooter games such as PUBG: Battlegrounds, Arma 3, Destiny 2, War Thunder, and DayZ.

  5. Valve Anti-Cheat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valve_Anti-Cheat

    Valve Anti-Cheat (VAC) is an anti-cheat tool developed by Valve as a component of the Steam platform, first released with Counter-Strike in 2002.. When the software detects a cheat on a player's system, it will ban them in the future, possibly days or weeks after the original detection. [1]

  6. Shadow banning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shadow_banning

    Shadow banning, also called stealth banning, hell banning, ghost banning, and comment ghosting, is the practice of blocking or partially blocking a user or the user's content from some areas of an online community in such a way that the ban is not readily apparent to the user, regardless of whether the action is taken by an individual or an algorithm.

  7. Spoofing attack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spoofing_attack

    Many of the protocols in the TCP/IP suite do not provide mechanisms for authenticating the source or destination of a message, [2] leaving them vulnerable to spoofing attacks when extra precautions are not taken by applications to verify the identity of the sending or receiving host.

  8. ARP spoofing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ARP_spoofing

    A successful ARP spoofing (poisoning) attack allows an attacker to alter routing on a network, effectively allowing for a man-in-the-middle attack.. In computer networking, ARP spoofing (also ARP cache poisoning or ARP poison routing) is a technique by which an attacker sends Address Resolution Protocol (ARP) messages onto a local area network.

  9. Fail2ban - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fail2ban

    [10] Fail2ban is similar to DenyHosts [...] but unlike DenyHosts which focuses on SSH, fail2ban can be configured to monitor any service that writes login attempts to a log file, and instead of using /etc/hosts.deny only to block IP addresses/hosts, fail2ban can use Netfilter/iptables and TCP Wrappers /etc/hosts.deny .