


Valve’s new trade protection system for CS2 skins has thrown a big wrench into the world of independent skin trading, forcing third-party sites to rethink their operations. The anti-fraud rule is already shaking up the way skin trading works across the board, and its implications are likely to continue to be felt in the months to come.
The CS2 digital market is one of the biggest in gaming, with virtual items that can cost as much as a house. For years, Valve’s loose trading system facilitated these high-value deals quickly and easily, but now, with a stricter system in place, buyers and sellers are scrambling to adjust. CS2’s new trade protection allows skin owners to recover items in the event of a scam, and while that sounds great for most players on paper, it has some serious implications for third-party trading sites.
Since the announcement, a few CS2 trading websites have responded to the reverse trade feature with new rules of their own.
Valve’s new Trade Protection update slaps a 7-day lock on CS2 trades, giving the sending party a window to pull items back if a deal turns sketchy. Trading sites may suffer greatly from this, as serious traders often look to them for quick ownership changes and transactions. The bigger issue, though, is control. Steam now allows sellers to undo trades at any point during the lock period, and even an established trading site cannot stop that.
To address this, CSFloat has introduced a bold new policy. While the site respects Valve’s 7-day hold, it takes a hard stance against reverse trade misuse. Any attempt to reverse a trade, whether you’re the buyer or seller, results in a permanent ban. Since Steam now allows the sender to cancel a trade within seven days, there’s a risk that someone could sell a skin for real money, receive payment, and then reverse the trade. CSFloat’s ban policy is designed to discourage such scams by making the consequences immediate and irreversible.
iTrade.gg, among other websites, also paused all operations to implement full integration so that trading could resume under the new rules. Market.CSGO, on the other hand, remained live throughout the process and focused on making the new rules transition as smooth as it could be for its users. Since Valve now requires players to confirm trades through a pop-up window, Market.CSGO updated its desktop app to handle that step in the process automatically.
The majority of heavy lifters in the trading market went temporarily offline to adjust to the new feature. But while some platforms stayed online, one smaller site claims that rushing back without proper safeguards may have left them exposed to a dangerous exploit.

While working to bring CS2 trading back online, iTrade.gg claims it accidentally discovered a Steam exploit that allows users to reverse trades selectively. When a user deposits a skin to one of these sites, they’re immediately given site balance to spend on other items. If the user then uses that balance to purchase additional skins and later reverses the original deposit trade within the 7-day window, Steam apparently may return the deposited skin, but won’t undo the purchases made with the balance.
This allows the user to walk away with both the original skin and any new skins they bought, essentially stealing from the site. According to iTrade.gg, Valve is already issuing trade bans to those users who have attempted to exploit this loophole.

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