cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/8449648

Thinking about installing Riot’s rootkit

If I have an encrypted Linux partition and a Windows partition that I use as a bootloader into Riot’s games, what are the drawbacks of installing their kernel level anticheat?

  • chameleon@kbin.social
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    1 year ago

    Windows software running in Wine/Proton can bypass the Windows layer and call Linux stuff directly. This is fine; Wine isn’t intended to be a security layer by itself. Some of the Proton bits that Valve made to build a bridge between Windows games & the Linux Steam client does this, as well as pretty much every other bit of Wine internals.

    Easy Anti-Cheat detects that it’s running in Wine and if the game dev enabled Wine support, it downloads a binary that knows how to do that. That version of EAC doesn’t run at kernel level, but it does scan your Linux userspace for cheats, or whatever Epic feels like doing today. As with every userland anti-cheat, the company making it can update it more or less anytime you’re playing the game and since it’s running in the context of the game, it has access to everything the game does. Same thing for most anti-cheat software really.