L
L
Littlesh2017-06-07 13:12:49
Iron
Littlesh, 2017-06-07 13:12:49

How can my system be identified?

Good afternoon, I ran into the problem of a ban in an online game for using third-party programs. The fact is that usually a warning or a ban is issued for several days, while a permanent ban is an extreme measure of punishment. At first there were warnings and small bans, but now, no matter what I do, namely: spoofed the MAC address, completely formatted and recreated the hard disk partitions, respectively, reinstalled the OS and, of course, changed the IP address - I get a permanent ban pretty quickly without any warnings. I think that the reason is my PC, the developers see that it is me, my id's are in some kind of black lists. Now I don’t have the opportunity to change hardware, besides, I don’t know what exactly should be changed in order to “whitewash” my system. In many games, as far as I know, developers issue a hardware ban,
What you should pay attention to? What identifiers could developers track in order to identify my PC from time to time and issue a ban without a doubt?

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

4 answer(s)
S
Stalker_RED, 2017-06-07
@Stalker_RED

Install some everest, aspia, cpu-z, gpu-z or something similar and see how much information about your hardware is there - chip versions, frequencies, models, sometimes even unique IDs. No one (except for the legislation in some countries) prevents the game from remembering these numbers and banning them if they match significantly.

S
Saboteur, 2017-06-07
@saboteur_kiev

"The fact is that usually a warning or a ban for several days is issued, while a permanent ban is an extreme measure of punishment."
Not at all. It depends on the resource. A permanent ban from the very first violation is a very useful measure that allows you to punish those who try to cheat at an early stage, and by the example of those who are banned, show the rest that you don’t even need to try - we’ll ban you right away.
As for your attempts, most likely they banned IP or IP range. And changing the poppy address does not bother anyone at all in this case.

C
CityCat4, 2017-06-07
@CityCat4

Why not in this case? Just in this. Just like, for example, 1C calculates that the hardware in the computer has changed. You can identify:
- mother
- disks
- memory
- percent
If a computer has a percent with serial number such and such and a pair of screws with serial numbers such and such and four memory sticks with serial numbers such and such on the mother of such and such a manufacturer with such- then the BIOS date of such and such a revision of such and such a model - what is the chance that this computer will be recognized among others? Yes, almost 100%: D
You can try to change the screw, change the number of memory sticks - but this may not help. Most likely - a pair of processor + mother - because it is the most difficult to disengage :D

A
Alexey Nikolaev, 2017-06-07
@Heian

Perhaps behavioral factors are taken into account. It's no secret that a particular user is distinguished by a lot of features that characterize him - the time of the game, when he enters, when he exits, general signs of behavior (what he does), the style of play and other trifles. Bugusers, among other things, have anomalous characteristics + complaints from players. Comparing three parameters - the matching number of some piece of iron, behavioral factors and the next complaint about the next cheater - is very simple.
You can also control the screen resolution.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question