Copy of Grand Theft Auto that runs in a web browser gets taken down by DMCA — Take Two says DOS Zone infringed company’s intellectual property rights despite disclaimers and requirement to own original copy of title for full game
Take-Two wants you to buy the game from official sources and won't let you try playing it from a browser.
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Take-Two Interactive, the parent company of Rockstar Games and owner of the Grand Theft Auto franchise, just issued a DMCA takedown request for the online port of GTA: Vice City hosted by DOS Zone. This has forced the online platform to remove the game from its library, which allowed players to run the large-scale game directly from their browser. An email from Ebrand, a global online brand protection firm acting on behalf of the owner of the GTA franchise, stated that DOS Zone must remove content and functionality that referenced or enabled anyone to use the game or any other Take-Two titles, including the game demo.
“It has come to our attention that your website is hosting and promoting a browser-based project that uses that name ‘Grand Theft Auto: Vice City,’” the letter said. It also added, “Your website further invites users to input data and keys from original game copies to access or unlock functionality. This activity facilitates unauthorized use of copyrighted game content and may constitute circumvention of technological protection measures, in violation of applicable copyright law, including the DMCA. Despite the disclaimers published on your site, your project is not authorized, licensed, endorsed, or approved by Take-Two or Rockstar Games. The use of our client’s trademarks, copyrighted materials, and game-related references in this manner is misleading to users and constitutes infringement of Take-Two’s intellectual property rights.”
According to Strebeck Law, video game copyright for work-for-hire titles (such as GTA: Vice City, developed by a team for Rockstar Games) lasts for 95 years from the publication date or 120 years from the date of creation, whichever comes first. Since the game launched in 2002 for PlayStation 2 and the following year for Windows and Xbox, it means that we’ll have to wait until 2097 before it enters the public domain, and we can play and modify the game without going through Take-Two (or any of its successor organizations).
This hasn’t stopped users from creating reverse-engineered “open-source” versions of the game and posting them on GitHub, though. We see three versions available on the developer platform at the time of writing, with one of them looking like a copy of the code used on DOS Zone. It appears these haven’t been affected by Take-Two’s DMCA request, but if the company acts against them, Microsoft would likely comply and remove them as well.
Take-Two is known for strictly protecting its assets against unauthorized ports, mods, remakes, and leaks, but it’s still not as historically aggressive as Nintendo, which is known to sue even YouTubers and reviewers. So, it’s not surprising that the former took action against DOS Zone, especially as it still sells new copies of GTA: Vice City for PC, PlayStation 4 and 5, Xbox One and Series X|S, Nintendo Switch, Android, and iOS. It would likely have been better if Take-Two had created an online version of GTA: The Trilogy – The Definitive Edition, as it would allow anyone to play those titles on any device. However, it’s likely not in the cards as the company is working hard to deliver GTA VI, which, although it has already been delayed twice, is expected to drop in November 2026.
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LordVile Reply
Why is this news?Admin said:Take-Two takes down the online demo of GTA: Vice City found on DOS Zone — says it violates its copyright.
Browser-run copy of Grand Theft Auto gets taken down by DMCA — Take Two says DOS Zone infringed company’s intellectual property rights despite disc...: Read more -
GrigoryGaga These browser experiments are still impressive. The community keeps proving that classics can live on in new formats.Reply -
Shiznizzle Word of warning here regarding Rockstar gamesReply
If you own them on steam, the games, and "link" your account with them, Rockstar. You better be damn sure you can remember the exact details of this linkage. Time, date and place and possibly even IP address and make of computer.
Rockstar is using this obscure "read the fine print" when linking, to deny you access to your paid for games that exist on steam. How they are able to lock you out of steam bought games is beyond me but they are.
They denied me time and time again and not even escalating the issue after supplying all the info they wanted was i allowed back into my games. They stated i was a liar, that i was not the person and that i faked the pics that i took on steam.
Rockstar hopes you buy their games again. I lost access to the game that were able to link......I deleted from steam all others ones i had and vowed to never, ever, ever, ever again buy anything from them. -
steviant I'm so thankful for copyright, without nearly 100 years of exclusivity there's almost no way anyone could possibly hope to make enough money from their creations to justify bothering to make them in the first place.Reply
I know rent seeking is basically marcantilism under a different name, but in this case it really seems to benefit everyone equally to put aside capitalism and freedom so that licensors can have popular culture sequestered into a private fiefdom.
God bless America. -
bigdragon Reply
Myself and several friends lost access to GTAV many years ago due to playing online during New Years and having millions of dollars of in-game currency rain down on our heads. There was nothing we could do to avoid it. I've also vowed never to buy another Rockstar game since then. They treat their customers like trash. I would play GTA for free in a browser, but there's no way I'd pay for and install one of those games again.Shiznizzle said:Rockstar hopes you buy their games again. I lost access to the game that were able to link......I deleted from steam all others ones i had and vowed to never, ever, ever, ever again buy anything from them. -
LordVile Reply
So you’d pirate a game you don’t intend to buybigdragon said:Myself and several friends lost access to GTAV many years ago due to playing online during New Years and having millions of dollars of in-game currency rain down on our heads. There was nothing we could do to avoid it. I've also vowed never to buy another Rockstar game since then. They treat their customers like trash. I would play GTA for free in a browser, but there's no way I'd pay for and install one of those games again.