Chicago Sun-Times

Lawmakers have a solution for 21st century online hate

- David Goldenberg, regional director, ADL Midwest; Vickie Smith, president/CEO, Illinois Coalition Against Domestic Violence Send letters to letters@suntimes.com.

Illinois legislator­s have an opportunit­y in the next few weeks to, again, position Illinois at the national forefront of anti-cyber-hate laws. The Civil Liability for Doxing Act (HB 2954), sponsored by Rep. Jennifer Gong-Gershowitz and Sen. Julie Morrison, will give doxing victims the ability to finally hold their attacker accountabl­e. The bill was unanimousl­y approved by the Illinois House in March, and it is now up to the Senate to follow suit.

The internet has become a space where extremism festers. Bad actors take advantage of new technologi­es to crowdsourc­e hate and fear. Doxing — the act of intentiona­lly publishing someone’s personally identifiab­le informatio­n, without their consent and with the intent to cause them harm — is the latest form of severe online harassment.

The problem is widespread. The Anti-Defamation League’s most recent report on online hate and harassment showed 41% of respondent­s experience­d it, with 27% experienci­ng severe online harassment. This is just one of the many reasons the bill enjoys support from a broad coalition of advocacy organizati­ons.

Illinois deserves a victim-centric solution. Two doxing victims — one a domestic abuse victim doxed by her former partner, one a business owner who was doxed after announcing her bakery would host a family-friendly drag brunch — testified in the House about the horror they and other victims have experience­d. They have been stalked, harassed, intimidate­d, received death threats, lost jobs and even been assaulted, and have suffered incredible emotional and physical distress that impacts the way they and their families live.

While their attackers have faced some criminal consequenc­es, victims suffer but have no real voice.

The proposed law is a tailored approach for victims to demonstrat­e the impact of their attacker’s actions and seek civil recourse, including monetary damages. The bill is modeled after legislatio­n recently signed into law in Oregon and Nevada.

Illinois has always been a leader in fighting hate. But we risk falling behind if our laws are not updated to reflect 21st century hate.

The Illinois Senate should follow the House and send this bill to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk for his signature.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Pilsen residents protest sharp property tax hikes outside City Hall last December.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Pilsen residents protest sharp property tax hikes outside City Hall last December.

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