Ask HN: Playing multiplayer games while BYOD WFH
I've recently found out (thanks to a HN post) that virtually all of the online games I play use increasingly invasive anticheats, and some such as Battleye will send the full contents of every certificate and driver installed, including work ones, and Hackshield/Gameguard send PII, full paths, names of open files, all of the above send full window titles and other contents that might contain personal information - even while there are no games running, and several of the rootkits start at boot. These services start and run at all times, and are not uninstalled when you uninstall the game.
I definitely have had private full names and private internal email addresses and other such things in window titles, items that would be considered 'restricted' in filenames of documents.
Do I need to be worried about this from a legal or "leaking trade secrets/PII" point of view because of the spyware that virtually every game in the world installs?
6 comments
[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 21.1 ms ] threadIf they expect you to work from your machine, it's completely their problem to protect their IT side. But it's also your potential problem that the company may get access to your private data.
Ideally, if you can, just request a work laptop. "Your VPN client doesn't work correctly on my laptop" should help. It helps both them and you if any issues arise.
Linux host, window guest. When I left I just destroyed the VM and that was it.
I'm wondering what happens to company data that's been exfiltrated by these anticheat services or how it's protected