Comment has been collapsed.
I did see that before I posted this, and I would've commented there if the thread wasn't closed. Also the links in that thread don't work because the forum is gone, I used the internet archive links.
Comment has been collapsed.
16,701 Comments - Last post 4 minutes ago by InSpec
25 Comments - Last post 25 minutes ago by Fluffster
35 Comments - Last post 25 minutes ago by Fluffster
47 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by lokonopa
118 Comments - Last post 2 hours ago by rayne7
256 Comments - Last post 3 hours ago by shad0wk
12 Comments - Last post 4 hours ago by OwieczkaDollyv21
10,053 Comments - Last post 29 seconds ago by TeDGamer
68 Comments - Last post 7 minutes ago by NewbieSA
85 Comments - Last post 26 minutes ago by vaalita
115 Comments - Last post 33 minutes ago by Khazadson
291 Comments - Last post 37 minutes ago by Dayannah
10 Comments - Last post 59 minutes ago by CrystalVanille
209 Comments - Last post 1 hour ago by CupcakeDollykins
https://web.archive.org/web/20250114034739/https://forums.steamrep.com/pages/eol/
SteamRep - End of Life
Why are we sunsetting SteamRep?
TLDR: The community and fraudster techniques have evolved such that SteamRep’s ‘reputation’ model, established over a decade ago, is no longer effective or sustainable enough to maintain.
SteamRep was designed to safeguard gamers against members of the community who committed fraud or other illicit behavior. This was done through education as well as community reporting of malicious actors.
Over time, as the community grew and trading became more complex, so too did the methods used to steal. Scammers now frequently use alternate accounts and third-party platforms to obfuscate their actions, preventing reasonable evidence gathering.
The individual scammer has become the exception, and in its place are organized criminal groups stealing users’ accounts en masse, selling off those items, and using these stolen accounts to find their next unsuspecting victim.
SteamRep lacks the information that Valve or Law Enforcement has access to, and is largely ineffective against this level of organized fraud. Many of the reports we receive are reporting users who themselves are the victims of account hijackings, and trying to take action against those users only results in further difficulties.
Unfortunately, the majority of exposure SteamRep has with the community at large occurs after a user becomes a victim of a scam, and there is nothing we can do to help those who are already victims. This makes SteamRep’s objective of using education to prevent scams from occurring less effective. Due to these developments, and the challenge of working within the existing model, we felt a sunset was for the best.
This has been a long journey, and we very much appreciate all of the community and partner support, as well as the incredible hard work of our volunteers over the years.
What’s the timeline?
While SteamRep’s ultimate dissolution is set in stone, the finer details are largely open-ended right now, as we seek staff/partner feedback on considerations needed for sunset. We have a rough outline approved by the OFPF (Online Fraud and Prevention Foundation) Board:
What is happening with the data?
Below is the preliminary overview. We will have more details as we discuss more with our staff and partners.
Reputation Database (i.e. steamrep.com):
Forums (i.e. forums.steamrep.com) content:
What should partners do about pending reports or appeals in their queue?
Effective immediately, no new scam reports may be submitted to our database, either through SteamRep or any partner community. Partners' bans from scam reports in their own communities will not be reflected in SteamRep. We will attempt to honor unresolved reports in partner communities that were created prior to this announcement of sunset (if active).
SteamRep admins reserve the right to make exceptions and issue BANNED tags at any time prior to full sunset in extreme circumstances - such as a rogue admin taking advantage of this announcement. Such tags will be included in the final export of BANNED and CAUTION tags, allowing communities to continue excluding such individuals from their sites or servers. Same applies to appeals.
Why not give it to someone else?
We welcome any partners or other communities who wish to help protect the community from scammers, but while we trust our partners today, it would be impossible to guarantee that any successor would/could maintain integrity practices in perpetuity. Similarly, we cannot make any long-term guarantees about proper handling of evidence data. In the end, to protect privacy, that data will not be transferred to any community wishing to carry the mission.
What is happening to OFPF (and donations)?
SteamRep has not been accepting donations for a long while now, but the Online Fraud Prevention Foundation (OFPF) charity has sufficient remaining funds to manage the site through the sunset period.
OFPF itself will continue after the sunset, but any future plans here are not certain. The goal is to continue its mission of protecting online gamers from fraud through education, awareness, and tools. If your community is working in this space, we’d be happy to discuss how OFPF knowledge or resources can assist in stopping online fraud.
Comment has been collapsed.