Doxxing refers to the act of publishing personal or identifying information or details about a person without consent, often with a call to others in the perpetrator’s network to harass or threaten the person whose personal information is published. The information revealed could include the targeted person’s name, address, phone numbers, email address, unique identifiers for government records, employment details, sexual preferences, personal photos, details of their close contacts like family, etc. As such, this information makes it possible to identify, locate, or contact the person. Doxxing constitutes a serious breach of the victim’s privacy, and is usually committed with the objective of causing distress, panic, or alarm to the victim, by posing a threat to their safety as well as the safety of those around them, both in the online and the offline world. The personal information for committing doxxing is usually obtained by scouring public databases and social media profiles to gather information such as photos, location, and contact details. Such information may also be obtained directly from the victim speaking in confidence. Technologically equipped abusers use sophisticated means such as reverse phone lookup, running a search on a domain name, phishing, tracking an internet protocol (IP) address, etc., to obtain personal information about the targeted victim. Doxxing can also be an offshoot of voyeurism, when an image or video produced as part of a voyeuristic act is published online, thereby revealing the identity of the victim.
Doxxing can take three major forms:
- Deanonymizing doxxing, where the identity of a previously anonymized individual is revealed.
- Targeting doxxing, where specific details of an individual that are usually private, obscure, or obfuscated, are targeted and revealed.
- Delegitimizing doxxing, where intimate personal details of a person are revealed to destroy their credibility.
While deanonymizing and delegitimizing doxxing can sometimes be used to expose wrongdoings and wrongdoers, thus serving public interest, all three forms of doxxing are unjustified if they humiliate, threaten, intimidate, or punish the subject of doxxing.
In India, the bulk of online bullying and harassment, including doxxing, is faced by women in public life, especially those who dare to transgress societal norms. A disturbing instance of doxxing in recent times is the creation of the open source applications called ‘Sulli Deals’ and ‘Bulli Bai’ which put images of several Muslim women, many of whom are vocal online, up for auction. Hosted on GitHub, the applications used photographs sourced from the women’s social media handles without their consent.