Take-Two is renewing its effort to get Grand Theft Auto 6 leaks removed from the internet, issuing a wave of copyright strikes. Rockstar was the victim of a serious hacking breach this past year, reportedly leading to the arrest of a 17-year-old in the United Kingdom. Various small Grand Theft Auto 6 leaks have found their way onto social media since, but nothing substantial. Another recent leak appears to have provoked a strong response from Take-Two, getting some communities in trouble.
On September 18, a member of the GTAForums community posted more than 50 minutes of video recorded from an in-development version of Grand Theft Auto 6. The leaks revealed several substantial unannounced details from the highly-anticipated Grand Theft Auto sequel. Publisher Take-Two aggressively targeted leaked Grand Theft Auto 6 material, but as is often the case online when something goes viral, it's difficult to stomp out every fire.
Image Shows How Much Bigger GTA 6 Map May Be Compared to GTA 5
Somehow, likely due to the sheer amount of leaked Grand Theft Auto 6 content, some leak-focused communities were able to continue sharing material without receiving copyright strikes. The GTA6 subreddit is one such community, though that appears to have ended after a new leak hit the community this past week. Moderators for the GTA6 subreddit have posted an announcement saying that it is locking the community down as Reddit responds to «lots of copyright strikes.»
Going forward, the GTA6 community says that no leaks will be allowed to be posted. That includes links directly posted on the subreddit as well as linking out to other sources of leaked Grand Theft Auto 6 content. Apparently, Reddit has threatened to shut down the community entirely if
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