This statement does not constitute a waiver of any rights that Take-Two may have with respect to third-party projects. Take-Two reserves the right to object to any third-party project, or to revise, revoke and/or withdraw this statement at any time in their own discretion. This is not a license, and it does not constitute endorsement, approval, or authorization of any third-party project.
This does not apply to (i) multiplayer or online services (ii) tools, files, libraries, or functions that could be used to impact multiplayer or online services, or (iii) use or importation of other IP (including other Rockstar IP) in the project. After discussions with Take-Two, Take-Two has agreed that it generally will not take legal action against third-party projects involving Rockstar’s PC games that are single-player, non-commercial, and respect the intellectual property (IP) rights of third parties.
Rockstar Games believes in reasonable fan creativity and, in particular, wants creators to showcase their passion for our games. And in a new statement, Rockstar and Take-Two reaffirmed their general commitment to allowing single-player mods in the game: Further Reading Rockstar to GTA V PC players: We don’t issue bans for single-player modsSince then, Rockstar tells Rock Paper Shotgun they have been in touch with Krivoruchko and coordinated an OpenIV update that ensures the modding tool can't be used in GTA Online, leading to its restoration online.