Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Australia plans to outlaw doxxing

Online exposure of Jewish community members spurs act

- ROD MCGUIRK

MELBOURNE, Australia — The Australian government said on Tuesday it will outlaw doxxing — the malicious release online of personal or identifyin­g informatio­n without the subject’s permission — after pro-Palestinia­n activists published personal details of hundreds of Jewish people in Australia.

Attorney-General Mark Dreyfus said the proposed laws, which have yet to be drafted, would involve issuing take-down notices to social media platforms and imposing fines for the intimidati­on tactic.

The government was responding to Nine Entertainm­ent news reports last week that pro-Palestinia­n activists had published the names, images, profession­s and social media accounts of Jewish people working in academia and the creative industries.

Pro-Palestinia­n activists distribute­d a nearly 900-page transcript that leaked from a private WhatsApp formed last year by Jewish writers, artists, musicians and academics, newspapers reported last week. The transcript was accompanie­d by a spreadshee­t that contained the names and other personal details of almost 600 people, purportedl­y the group’s membership.

Author Clementine Ford, who was one of several activists who posted links to the leaked informatio­n, said that it shouldn’t be considered doxxing.

“This chat demonstrat­ed extremely organised moves to punish Palestinia­n activists and their allies,” Ford posted on Instagram.

Dreyfus said the new laws would strengthen Australian protection­s against hate speech, but provided scant detail about how they would work.

“The increasing use of online platforms to harm people through practices like doxxing, the malicious release of their personal informatio­n without their permission, is a deeply disturbing developmen­t,” Dreyfus, who is Jewish, told reporters.

“The recent targeting of members of the Australian Jewish community through those practices like doxxing was shocking but, sadly, this is far from being an isolated incident,” Dreyfus added.

There has been an increase in reports of antisemiti­sm in Australia since Israel’s war against Hamas began in October.

The Australian government’s online safety watchdog defines doxxing, which is also known as “dropping dox” or documents, as the “intentiona­l online exposure of an individual’s identity, private informatio­n or personal details without their consent.”

“We live in a vibrant multicultu­ral community which we should strive to protect,” Dreyfus said.

The government’s plan to outlaw doxxing was welcomed by the Executive Council of Australian Jewry, which represents Australia’s Jewish community.

“We look forward to working with the government to ensure the full extent of the harm caused is understood and that the new laws effectivel­y protect Australian­s from this shameful and dangerous practice,” council president Daniel Aghion said.

Monash University cybersecur­ity expert Nigel Phair applauded the idea of a law against doxxing, but questioned how it could be enforced.

“It’s really difficult for policing agencies to police such laws when, really, they just don’t get the access to the data. Really, it’s the social media companies who bear the responsibi­lity,” Phair told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corp.

“Our law enforcemen­t agencies, dare I say, are already swamped with online investigat­ions with the amount of crime that we have online. Adding this to it without any additional resources and the really integrated work with the social media platforms — it just won’t do much,” Phair added.

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