Quote:
Originally Posted by dmp21
Its not because its you, dont think to much of yourself. I have yet to be proven that they actually flag your monitor, not happend to me or anyone of the people i know who is hwid banned in rust.
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This is not entirely correct, EAC pulls the Monitors EDID from kernel (dxgkrnl.sys).
However, they don't issue bans based on your monitor alone, that part is correct.
There is also a variety of other serials/hashes being pulled that I'm not going to write here. However everything is sent off to EACs servers but they obviously don't ban on individual serials/hashes, they'll need more than 1 hit to knock you out, else it could be subject to false positives. Not changing 1 hash or serial might be fine, but when you start leaving out 2 or 3 you're gonna face trouble. Some hashes might add more weight than others as well. But i can guarantee you its being pulled.
How these identifiers are used if only 1 hit is registered is unknown. This is just me guessing but they could easily be used to identify you as a second stage identifier or incorporated in to Cerberus to issue swifter bans once something fishy has been registered, but clearly not enough to trigger an instant hwid ban.
Quote:
Originally Posted by B1LL#6666
Hello! Smart of you to ask. If you are HWID banned, that means you used a cheat before, and not once, but more than 3-4 times. As for what your asking, the only 2 solutions it these:
1. Buy new hardware like a GPU, Monitor, Ram Sticks, and mostly SSDs and HDDs
2. Buy a HWID Spoofer that includes a cleaner.
As for fear of trojans, just use a website called [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...]. It will scan the program/link for you for any threats.
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- EAC doesnt grab any GPU serials, just type and model.
- Theres no record of them pulling any info off ramsticks this is just rumors.
- They only pull serial of primary drive, same goes for network adapter.
- EAC leaves no tracefiles. At least not in Rust, Apex and the other games I've worked on.
- VirusTotal won't help against anything. The scans they offer are mainly static and cloud based but not runtime. As long as the coder isn't an incompetent teenager VirusTotal offers absolutely no safety at all. I'd suggest using a good runtime sandbox engine like [Only registered and activated users can see links. Click Here To Register...] instead to get it dynamically analysed. However writing antis for these engines isn't really hard either but it'll give you a much better idea of what the file actually does far beyond what VirusTotal can offer.
I hope i managed to clear up some of your confusion :)