Alleged GTA 6 leaker has been formally charged by police
The 17-year-old arrested on suspicion of hacking and widely thought to be the person behind last weekend's shocking GTA 6 leaks has now been charged with the offenses.
On Thursday, September 22, a teenager from the UK was arrested on suspicion of hacking, with an emerging report linking the individual to the recent Rockstar Games breach that resulted in over 90 GTA 6 videos and screens leaking online last weekend.
Though the police have not publicly confirmed that the arrest is related to Rockstar's security breach, journalist Matthew Keys tweeted that the 17-year-old – who, as a minor, is only known as A.K. – had been "arrested in Oxfordshire for the cyber attack on Rockstar and Uber". He further confirmed that the same teenager was also arrested earlier this year for hacking Microsoft and Nvidia.
Keys reports that he has been charged with "two computer crimes and two counts of violating his bail". It's thought that rumors about the teen being associated with the hacking group Lapsus$ are indeed true.
Teenager charged with breach of bail and computer misuse offences pic.twitter.com/8rQnsPblILSeptember 24, 2022
In an updated statement posted over the weekend, City of London Police (not to be confused with the Metropolitan Police) said:
"The City of London Police arrested a 17-year-old in Oxfordshire on Thursday (September 22) on suspicion of hacking, as part of an investigation supported by the National Crime Agency's National Cyber Crime Unit. He has been charged in connection with this investigation and remains in police custody.
"The teenager has been charged with two counts of breach of bail conditions and two counts of computer misuse".
The teenager appeared at Highbury Corner Youth Court yesterday, September 24, but as yet there's been no further update on the outcome of that court appearance.
As for Rockstar itself? It officially acknowledged the leak on Monday.
"We recently suffered a network intrusion in which an unauthorized third party illegally accessed and downloaded confidential information from our systems, including early development footage for the next Grand Theft Auto," a Twitter statement from the studio reads.
"At this time, we do not anticipate any disruption to our live game services nor any long-term effect on the development of our ongoing projects," Rockstar says, seemingly addressing concerns that a leak of this size could force the studio to scrap and redo non-trivial portions of GTA 6. Rockstar further affirms that "our work on the next Grand Theft Auto game will continue as planned."
"The GTA 6 leak helped nobody," Austin wrote in his feature, The GTA 6 leak was bad for everyone, but I'm glad developers are celebrating the brokenness of games. "However, it did indirectly result in a ton of game developers talking candidly about how games are made, which is always a treat.
"Many devs even shared some in-progress builds of their own to put the leak into perspective and correct hasty criticism of unfinished games and graphics. We rarely see the games industry rally around things like this, and it's even rarer for so many devs to come together and explain how the sausage is made."
There are plenty of games like GTA, if you need to fill the long wait ahead for the next entry in the series.
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