That account has now been banned as well, and several of the mods removed from the Steam Workshop-though not all of them. Valve had previously banned Chaos from Steam for doxxing members of the Cities: Skyline community, but he returned under the name Holy Water. “What’s been implemented would let him cryptolock a bunch of machines, create a botnet (and DDoS his enemies?) or mine cryptocurrency,” the NME’s source added. The mod also blocked access from Steam IDs belonging to other modders, well-known community members, and employees of developer Colossal Order, supposedly as a way of preventing its code from being examined.
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That mod, they went on to explain, contained an automatic updater that could, if players ran the game as an administrator, be used to remotely install “keyloggers, viruses, bitcoin mining software-literally anything.”
And that’s apparently where the trouble began.Īs a community moderator told the NME, one of the Chaos mods would set off fake error messages when it detected the original version of Harmony was running as a way of encouraging players to download Harmony (Redesigned). If you used Cities: Skylines mods from a user known as Chaos or Holy Water, it’s probably worth unsubscribing from them, as a post on the Cities: Skylines subreddit explains.Ĭhaos uploaded a redesigned version of Harmony (a patching library originally created for RimWorld that is now a framework relied on by the modding communities of several games), following that with redesigned versions of other mods like Network Extensions and Traffic Manager that required Harmony (Redesigned) also be installed.