Lagg writes:
"We're in a climate where it's easy to accuse a company of spying on you by various means with a distinct possibility that you could be right, but sometimes a reality check is needed. A Reddit user recently posted a thread accusing Valve of writing code for VAC that iterates your DNS cache and sends the hashed entries to their server. The proof provided of this was a prettied disassembly (that was not easily reproducible due to how VAC loads symbols) that showed only that VAC was indeed iterating the DNS cache, which any knowledgeable programmer understands is not exactly an uncommon thing to do, as no socket code was to be seen. Today, Gabe Newell responded to these allegations by confirming that no they do not in fact snoop your cache entries.
There are probably a few things to learn from this, including not trusting a screenshot of code that looks complex without actually understanding what it's doing. A lack of any level-headed investigation is a bad idea and it's important to handle these situations before they snowball into a mob (as Redditors are bound to do)."
(Score: 1) by nitehawk214 on Tuesday February 18 2014, @04:16PM
The article linked says the exact opposite. They ARE snooping cache entries, but only reporting back those in violation. The message does claim that it is only server connections and not web traffic that initiate a ban, so looking at a website of a cheat (for instance, if you were doing research on it) should not result in a ban.
To state that they do not look at the cache is a misstatement in the summary.
"Don't you ever miss the days when you used to be nostalgic?" -Loiosh