yesterday’s leak (opens in new tab) The GTA 6 footage was one of the biggest in the history of the gaming industry, and it was inevitable that the official response to it would be swift and far-reaching. It looks like they are starting to work on it now. In a statement, Rockstar Games acknowledged that the company “has suffered a network breach” and that “an unauthorized third party has compromised sensitive information, including early development footage of the upcoming Grand Theft Auto. It was accessed and downloaded from our system.”
The statement further stated that Rockstar was “extremely disappointed” that the details of the upcoming GTA were “shared in this way” and that the studio “will continue to develop this next game appropriately when it is ready.” It added that work on the game will continue “as planned”, suggesting that the leak will not affect the game’s projected development as was the case with Half-Life 2. I’m here. You can read the full statement below.
Meanwhile, Take Two Interactive began issuing takedown notices about the footage (and links to the footage) on multiple websites. Take Two’s response began late last night, with several videos on YouTube showing that the leaked footage has been removed at the company’s request. Take Two also issued takedown notices to two major GTA communities: the Grand Theft Auto 6 subreddit page and GTAForums, the original source of the leak.
As report The GTA6 subreddit has been temporarily removed by VGC as a moderator removed images of the leaked material. The subreddit has since been relaunched with a warning that “you cannot post links, photos or videos of recent leaks” to prevent them from being “deleted by Rockstar Games”.
moreover, GTA forum thread While the links to the leaked material have been removed or otherwise hidden, so has the one that started this whole incident. Confidential media has been hidden and the thread has been republished for archival reasons.”
The leak was originally published on GTAForums early Sunday morning and is believed to be the result of a social engineering hack. The leaker, who goes by various monikers “Teapot,” has also claimed responsibility for his recent Uber hack.After deliberation on the appropriateness of the footage, the leak confirmed to be legal By Jason Schreier of Bloomberg. After the leak went viral, Tea Pot updated its original post, sending messages to Rockstar and Take Two saying they were “trying to negotiate a deal,” though they didn’t specify the nature of the deal they were proposing. claimed.