In the days following this weekâs massive Grand Theft Auto VI leaks, investigations have revealed more information about the party behind the hack. Rather than a single individual, it appears that at least two peopleâpossibly connected to a larger hacker groupâwere behind the weekendâs huge breach. And while Rockstar Games locks down its social media accounts to fight back against the spread of leaked content, itâs now likely the hackers are being investigated by the FBI.
On September 18 on the GTA Forums, a user appeared and dropped over 90 videos showcasing early development footage of the next Grand Theft Auto game, assumed to be GTA VI. The footage contained early looks at the gameâs setting of Vice City, as well as police chases, shootouts, and what appear to be two main characters. In the days since the leak, Rockstar Games and its parent company, Take-Two Interactive, have tried to scrub the leaked material off the web. Rockstar released a statement on September 19, suggesting that the disastrous leak was the result of a hacker who had âillegallyâ gained access to the studioâs network.
Now we know that the GTA VI hacker wasnât a single person, but probably at least two different individuals. In a new post on the GTA Forums, the siteâs staff shared the results of their investigations into the leaker, explaining that based on posting behavior and IP address data, they believed at least two people were sharing the GTA Forums account, âTeaPotUberHacker,â that posted the leaked data.
According to the staffâs update, they donât believe the account was stolen, but was instead shared between the two hackers, known as âTeapotâ and âLily.â GTA Forums staff notes that Lily has been active on Telegram but that they donât believe Lily âcurrently possesses any of the hacked materials they claim to hold,â and they warn against interacting with them.
The transportation app company Uber, which was also recently hacked, issued a âsecurity updateâ earlier this week pinning responsibility on a hacker group called Lapsus$. It claimed that Lapsus$ has also, this year, âbreached Microsoft, Cisco, Samsung, Nvidia, and Okta, among others,â and is now also behind the GTA VI leak. Uber says that itâs working with the FBI and U.S. Justice Department to help with the investigation. At this time itâs unknown if Rockstar is also working with the FBI.
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â Rockstar Games (@RockstarGames) September 22, 2022
In the meantime, while the leaked footage and screenshots continue to spread around the web, Rockstar has seemingly taken action by locking down its social media accounts. If you look at its most recent tweet and Instagram posts, youâll notice that theyâre closed to comments and replies. Thatâs presumably an attempt by Rockstar to slow the spread of the leaked materials, as some fans would likely use the replies under GTA Online-related tweets to share content from the leak.
Kotaku has reached out to Rockstar for comment about the investigation and its newly locked down social media accounts.
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