Only as a last resort should a ban or account freeze should be necessary. But Valve and AMD should make all reasonable efforts to not inconvenience legit users. Finally you mailshot again and warn them to contact customer service with proof of purchase within 30 days or risk a perma ban. You might then mailshot every game owner and tell them the game will be disabled in 10 days unless they run it on the proper hardware and then you eliminate people who do that. Finally you're probably looking at a small % of legit owners to track down. Then you look for the date that the exploit got into the wild (probably obvious from a graph of # registrations per day) and you eliminate all of them before that date.
#DIRT 3 PRODUCT KEY GENERATOR FREE#
A pure expression of rally, the pinnacle of off-road motor racing and it begins now, in Early Access, with regular free updates including new locations, new game modes and new vehicles. Then you audit the hardware of the remainder through Steam (and it's already capable of this) and see who is running AMD hardware that the promotion applied to eliminate them too. Welcome to DiRT Rally - a new world of DiRT. Probably 90% of those are using the same email address on Steam and can be eliminated.
No biggie? Legit customers would be treated by default as pirates unless they supplied proof of purchase, and until they did that could risk everything from their account being locked to being perma banned.Ī correct and more sensible option would be for AMD to supply Steam with a list of email addresses of users who registered. You open a support ticket, show proof of purchase and a picture of the media/CD key or whatever they require, and they reallocate the proper CD key back to your account.