Home » today » Technology » London Metropolitan Police announce arrest of 17-year-old suspect involved in early development content theft for upcoming Grand Theft Auto – mashdigi

London Metropolitan Police announce arrest of 17-year-old suspect involved in early development content theft for upcoming Grand Theft Auto – mashdigi

Rockstar Games released a statementConfirmAfter being stolen from the early development content of the next “Grand Theft Auto”, but pointing out that it will not affect the game’s development trend, the London Metropolitan Police previously stated on their official Twitter that they have halted the initial development of the next. “Grand Theft Auto” content, and even Uber’s internal data theft, while the suspect is only 17 years old.

-

However, the City of London Police have not released further details.Reported by The Desk website, etc.The London Metropolitan Police Department is alleged to have successfully arrested the suspect as part of the joint investigation of the US FBI and the UK Cyber ​​Crime Unit and obtained relevant information. At the same time, the suspect was also accused of maliciously assaulting at least two companies, internal system charges.

Previous rumors also claimed that the Rockstar Games and Uber hack could be related to the planning of the “Laspus $” hacker group, which attacked the Brazilian Ministry of Health as early as 2021 and subsequently targeted Uber, Microsoft and Cisco. , Samsung, NVIDIA and other famous technology companies have launched attacks.

Prior to this, a hacker named teapotuberhacker uploaded some 90 videos of early development content advertised as “Grand Theft Auto VI” on the GTAForums forum a bit earlier, although the sequel was apparently done by Rockstar, the developer of “Grand Theft Auto Series “. It is requested to be deleted, but many videos have already been disseminated through online channels such as Twitter.

At the same time, the hacker, known as teapotuberhacker, previously claimed to be linked to the recent Uber hacking incident, mainly by sending fraudulent text messages to Uber employees, in order to obtain the system login password. internal, and thus obtain more access rights to the system.

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.