
"cheating happens in most popular multiplayer games, and with the surface area of Call of Duty being so large, cheaters were always going to find a way to do what they do. Now, Activision has shared some data points about cheating in the beta so far, led by the statistic that 97% of cheaters were stopped within 30 minutes of when they signed in for the early-access beta."
"But our upgraded systems caught them faster than ever, powered by strengthened TPM 2.0 checks and automated systems helping to eliminate a large number of attempts to cheat," Activision's anti-cheat team, Ricochet, said. "Those who did manage to slip through didn't last long. Most never made it into a match. People may have seen clips online of people cheating in the Black Ops 7 beta, and that maybe made you think the beta was overrun with cheaters."
Multiplayer beta for Black Ops 7 began October 2 and experienced cheating attempts. Ninety-seven percent of cheaters were stopped within 30 minutes of sign-in during the early-access beta. Fewer than 1% of people who attempted to cheat actually got into a match, and those who did were removed within minutes. Anti-cheat measures included strengthened TPM 2.0 checks, automated detection, and real-time monitoring by Ricochet systems. Anti-cheat efforts also targeted cheat vendors, contributing to the closure of over 40 cheat developers and resellers since Black Ops 6 launched. Vendors sharing clips during beta were identified and will face enforcement beyond in-game actions.
Read at GameSpot
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