Well, this is all a storm in a glass of water.
This all boils down to people modding their singleplayer game, then entering online - with their game still being modded -. And then acting all surprised they get a ban because they -claim- they only use it for singleplay. Of course people get banned for entering online with a modded game, shouldn't it be that way?
Seriously, what should rockstar do? Track a million people in realtime in online to see if they actually use their 'singleplayer' trainers and stuff, or just do a simple check for modded files when they enter online. If you go play online, make sure to do it with an unmodded game, it's not that hard. No one got banned for modding singleplayer without entering online with those mods, so the whole; modding singleplayer will get you banned in multiplayer is not true, it's entering multiplayer with a modded game that will get you banned. If banned people claim it's only for SP, why do they enter online with the mods active then?
And btw, so far history has proven rockstar only hands out temporary bans, usually around 2 weeks, has been like that in previous gta's and also with gtaV on console, so that reddit post is full of it, and if you read the other 2 links properly, you can see they are talking about entering online with mods still active. Well, we've already seen the invisible mode, unlimited ammo and god mode cheaters in online in a few days after release, so as far as I'm concerned I wish there would be more that rockstar would do then hand out temp bans for entering online with a modded game...
Rockstars position about modding is, mod your game, lose support (like in any game), and enter online with a modded game, risk action being taken.
I don't see anything surprising here, or should rockstar trust people on their blue eyes that they won't use their mods when entering online with a modded game?
To quote something from the links in the OP:
Even if you don't activate any of the several
GTA 5 mods while playing its multiplayer mode, it's possible that simply having one installed while accessing GTA Online counts.We'd recommend disabling mods completely before attempting to play GTA Online, at least until we have more information.
I'm sorry, but to me, that makes perfect sense when you enter online...