Opening Pandora’s Dox: The Unintended Consequences of an Internet That Never Forgets

Comment

Image Credits: Jared and Corin (opens in a new window) / Flickr (opens in a new window) under a CC BY-SA 2.0 (opens in a new window) license.

Every year the Oxford English Dictionary adds a handful of new words in recognition of how technological and social progress have affected the English language.

One of the new words this year is the longstanding 4chan-ism “dox,” which, unfortunately, has become all too relevant in the modern world.

“Doxing” is one of those terms that’s problematically overbroad. I’ve argued about the definition of “doxing” at length with friends. It’s a corruption of “docs,” itself short for “documentation”; to “drop dox” on someone is to make publicly available private information about them.

Of course, what counts as “private information” is contentious. Most doxers aren’t genius hackers able to gain access to genuinely hidden, secret information–most of the dox that gets dropped is publicly available, it’s just information that the subject never expected to be widely publicized in front of a hostile audience. (For the record, federal law states that publicizing “restricted personal information” like someone’s home address in a context that leads to intimidation or threats is a crime, even if the address was publicly posted elsewhere.)

I’ve personally had the unpleasant experience of seeing my home address posted in a dox drop on a chan thread. And then having to contact my local law enforcement to warn them not to send a SWAT team to my house if they got a bogus phone call about a hostage situation, to minimize the probability I will be shot dead by an overzealous police officer.

This practice, “swatting,” is the unpleasant corollary of doxing–the easiest way to use dox to physically screw with someone you dislike. (Someday I’ll have to meet Caroline Sinders and swap our stories about asking middle-aged ladies “Have you heard of Gamergate?”)

120612357_a498028423_b

I’ve had to go through the Crash Override guide to getting my address off of a huge list of personal information brokers, a painstaking and thankless process of sending email after email–in some cases having to send paper mail or faxes–to businesses that seem to exist for the sole purpose of enabling doxers, stalkers and spammers.

As swattings become increasingly common in the news, I’ve darkly wondered how many people have to die before people realize how fucked up the business model of Spokeo and PeekYou is. It doesn’t help that ICANN has taken the shockingly tone-deaf step of asking everyone who operates a commercial website to put their real home address in their WHOIS database, putting everyone who takes money over their website in physical danger just to make it slightly easier to prosecute copyright violators.

But it isn’t even that that really has me worried. Publicizing stuff like your physical address or your bank account info is, after all, unambiguously illegal, even if like most crimes committed over the Internet it’s nearly impossible to catch or prosecute the culprits.

If my physical address were revealed, it would put me in danger only until I moved–something that I was planning to do in the near future anyway. If my bank account info were revealed, I might suffer a financial loss, but the loss would be recoverable once fraud was proven, and once I knew the information was leaked I could have it changed. Even a Social Security number can be changed if you can prove you’ve been a victim of harassment.

All of this is a huge pain in the ass, of course, and the massive expense and hassle of physically relocating to escape harassment is something no one should have to go through.

But there’s some leaks that can’t ever be taken back — or patched over or fixed — and they’re generally things that, as things stand, aren’t even illegal.

Take the recent kerfuffle that sent Gawker’s reputation reeling and nearly ignited a Gawker civil war–the pointless, mean-spirited outing of Condé Nast’s CFO as possibly being a closeted gay man who arranged to cheat on his wife with a sex worker.

368912557_2fc44d3709_o

I’m not linking the story or saying his name, but you know it and if you want to find out what it is it’ll take a three-second Google search; unfortunately, the story made headlines partly because he’s the brother of a former Cabinet secretary and therefore his last name is memorable.

The world collectively agreed, upon seeing the story, that it was of no public interest and served only to shame someone over a private family matter. Even Gawker’s gossip-hungry commentariat revolted over the issue. The story may not even be true; just going from the details given, the escort who leaked the story sounds like he’s far from a reliable source.

There was a lot of invocation of the First Amendment going around among Gawker’s defenders (who were few and far between outside of Gawker’s own staff). And yes, given that truth is an absolute defense against defamation in the United States, and the Gawker reporter was careful to report unproven allegations only as unproven allegations, it’s hard to argue that what Gawker did was technically against the law.

But it was far more damaging than if the reporter in question had leaked the CFO’s address or credit card number. A wealthy public figure has the money and the clout to protect themselves in the event of a direct threat like that–they can move house if they have to.

But a smear to someone’s reputation lasts forever. It’s quite likely that, even in a few years, the chatter about the Gawker story will continue to dominate the top hits for the CFO’s name when you Google it. It’s the reputational smears, in fact, that generate the rage and excitement that makes it fun for trolls to try to swat you or hack your bank account.

The fact that it has to get to the point of addresses and account numbers before anything is legally actionable is why these laws are so ineffective — the troll who starts the ball rolling is legally in the clear, and it’s only the bottom-feeders who come along at the end of the process who make themselves legally vulnerable.

We’re seeing this play out again with the Ashley Madison hack, where plenty of people are passing around stolen data for shits and giggles and the widespread moral condemnation of the hack hasn’t stopped people from killing themselves upon being outed as Ashley Madison users.

There’s no hardline stance against infidelity that justifies public humiliation as a deterrent, no way that public humiliation doesn’t harm the cheater’s spouse and family as much as the cheater themselves. There’s people caught up in the Ashley Madison hack who were only on the site because they’re queer.

There’s people who weren’t even on the site but were maliciously added by others–because Ashley Madison does not require email authentication–in order to shame them, like my friend Peter Coffin whose email was added by trolls years before he met and married his wife. (Out of morbid curiosity I ran my GMail contacts through one of the free checkers, and I’m not in there but a number of my male friends are, none of whom are married–I’m guessing it’s a similar situation.)

If there’s any upside to this, it’s the possibility that older, wealthy straight men–the demographic the Ashley Madison scam targeted–might come to empathize with the constant fear LGBT people have lived with of being outed, or women have of being slut-shamed with revenge porn, and we might do something about it.

I talked recently with Mary Anne Franks, a lawyer pushing for a nationwide anti-revenge porn law, about what she calls “Pandora’s Dox,” the moment when someone’s identity is publicized in some nasty, hostile way that unleashes all manner of unpredictable ills on them that no one can predict.

The Gamergate shitstorm started because of a “Pandora’s dox” moment when game developer Zoe Quinn’s ex pulled a mini-Ashley Madison and publicized her alleged infidelity among people who already hated her for being an outspoken feminist–lo and behold, the harassment, gossip, and conspiracy-theory rumors about Quinn still haven’t died down a year later.

You can read Jon Ronson’s So You’ve Been Publicly Shamed for examples of how the dox don’t go back in the box, how Justine Sacco’s still afraid to date because men might Google her name, how Lindsey Stone laboriously gamed her Google search results to get the one unfortunate image of her flipping off a sign at Arlington National Cemetery off the front page.

And yes, Pandora’s Dox does — appropriately enough for something named after a sexist myth — happen far more easily to men than women. A man makes an ill-advised joke at a conference and a photo of his face — but not his name or identity — goes viral, losing him his current job, but he gets another one soon after.

Adria Richards, the woman who tweeted his photo, has her name blasted all over the Internet, her public reputation dragged through the mud and remains “too hot to handle” for recruiters years later.

I talked for a while with Franks about how revenge porn in particular is a major Pandora’s Dox moment for women, how there’s now immense pressure to share intimate photos as a basic element of courtship for women but not men, how much more readily men will publicly share those photos to score points with other men than women will, how the biases in our society mean those photos shame and devalue women despite our best efforts.

For every politician who accidentally disgraces himself by tweeting his dick pics, there’s thousands of women being shamed among their circles of friends for revealing photos. Even Franks’ End Revenge Porn law, which is facing pushback from groups like the ACLU for being too aggressive, still narrowly focuses on stuff that’s unambiguously “obscene” and “outside the public interest”, images of sexual activity or full nudity.

The woman who shared her story with me last weekend of being driven out of her gaming guild by assholes aggressively sharing bikini pics from her Facebook paired with leering captions would have no recourse under even the most aggressive anti-revenge-porn laws. Nor would the one lady who was afraid to show up in public because her embarrassing cosplay photo went viral. Nor would the “Star Wars kid” who had a nervous breakdown from being publicly mocked worldwide.

Nor would the adult film actors who, yes, consensually agreed to be filmed having sex for money but never agreed to have their real names outed by a vindictive ex-colleague on “Porn Wikileaks”, nor anyone who’s posted nudes anonymously only to be outed by creepy Redditors who enjoy playing amateur detective.

The new normal is that we all have to live with the unsettling knowledge that at any moment we might be the lucky individual to “go viral” and become famous for the rest of our lives for something unflattering or embarrassing; something that makes people gather around to laugh at us or mock us, or, worst of all, gin up murderous hate against us.

15423478806_d24c4b2615_b

I’ve had my own experience with pissing off the wrong group of dedicated online trolls and having them pore through my online history to find weak points to attack, quotes to take out of context and upsetting shit to just make up to try to push me back out of the public sphere.

I acknowledge that that’s part of public discourse. The Internet prides itself on aphorisms like “The Internet interprets censorship as damage and routes around it”; people still laugh about the “Streisand effect,” which, let’s not forget, comes from a story about Barbra Streisand being justifiably uncomfortable that people were taking photos of her house.

But yes, without the Internet’s power to dig up and amplify even the most obscure bits of information, without the Internet’s indelible memory, people could still get away with covering up police brutality, rapists and abusers could still get away with their crimes as long as they were respectable and well-connected enough, and “the narrative” in the media would still be the exclusive property of a tiny clique of wealthy white men.

I’ve written before how I don’t particularly trust the prejudices of media gatekeepers and I think that, all things considered, it’s a good thing they’ve lost control of the script.

But I don’t automatically trust the democratic instincts of the mob, either. Sometimes they’re noble, but all too often they’re vicious and stupid and irrational. It’d be different if the easiest people to shame were those who were genuinely guilty of wrongdoing, if the people most vulnerable to public outrage were the ones most deserving of public outrage.

But the paradox of Pandora’s dox is it doesn’t work that way. “Punching down” is always easier than “punching up”–it is, after all, the direction gravity pulls.

I’m a relatively insignificant voice in the world–a mid-tier Twitter user who writes columns for Internet publications. Me taking on major corporations or high-profile politicians has little impact on them.

But if I really wanted to I could easily initiate a pile-on on some random tweeter or blogger, bring down the full force of my own followers and my followers’ followers on them. I could do it even more easily to someone I dislike in real life who’s not conversant with the “rules” of this blogger game at all, someone who would be totally blindsided by Pandora’s Dox.

I see this happen all the time online, on scales both large and small, among tiny groups of Facebook friends and among high-profile Twitter cliques, on the “social justice left” and the “reactionary right”. Putting someone’s public identity on blast and raking their reputation over the coals is so easy people do it by accident.

There’s no law that could prevent this kind of negative pile-on that wouldn’t prevent all kinds of useful and necessary discourse–or, in the long run, prevent all discourse entirely. There’s no simple social rule that would prevent it even if we all followed it–because it turns out “Don’t punch down” isn’t all that simple.

It’s a problem that’s born of everything positive about the Internet–born of a massive social graph and fast-forming relationships and rapid information exchange–that grows as the Internet grows.

It’s a problem that’s not going away, even with anti-revenge porn and “right to be forgotten” laws that ameliorate the worst of the damage. The best advice I can give is to put yourself in Pandora’s shoes when you’re about to publicly criticize someone, and remember that some boxes once open can’t be closed.

More TechCrunch

Anterior, a company that uses AI to expedite health insurance approval for medical procedures, has raised a $20 million Series A round at a $95 million post-money valuation led by…

Anterior grabs $20M from NEA to expedite health insurance approvals with AI

Welcome back to TechCrunch’s Week in Review — TechCrunch’s newsletter recapping the week’s biggest news. Want it in your inbox every Saturday? Sign up here. There’s more bad news for…

How India’s most valuable startup ended up being worth nothing

If death and taxes are inevitable, why are companies so prepared for taxes, but not for death? “I lost both of my parents in college, and it didn’t initially spark…

Bereave wants employers to suck a little less at navigating death

Google and Microsoft have made their developer conferences a showcase of their generative AI chops, and now all eyes are on next week’s Worldwide Developers Conference, which is expected to…

Apple needs to focus on making AI useful, not flashy

AI systems and large language models need to be trained on massive amounts of data to be accurate but they shouldn’t train on data that they don’t have the rights…

Deal Dive: Human Native AI is building the marketplace for AI training licensing deals

Before Wazer came along, “water jet cutting” and “affordable” didn’t belong in the same sentence. That changed in 2016, when the company launched the world’s first desktop water jet cutter,…

Wazer Pro is making desktop water jetting more affordable

Former Autonomy chief executive Mike Lynch issued a statement Thursday following his acquittal of criminal charges, ending a 13-year legal battle with Hewlett-Packard that became one of Silicon Valley’s biggest…

Autonomy’s Mike Lynch acquitted after US fraud trial brought by HP

Featured Article

What Snowflake isn’t saying about its customer data breaches

As another Snowflake customer confirms a data breach, the cloud data company says its position “remains unchanged.”

1 day ago
What Snowflake isn’t saying about its customer data breaches

Investor demand has been so strong for Rippling’s shares that it is letting former employees particpate in its tender offer. With one exception.

Rippling bans former employees who work at competitors like Deel and Workday from its tender offer stock sale

It turns out the space industry has a lot of ideas on how to improve NASA’s $11 billion, 15-year plan to collect and return samples from Mars. Seven of these…

NASA puts $10M down on Mars sample return proposals from Blue Origin, SpaceX and others

Featured Article

In 2024, many Y Combinator startups only want tiny seed rounds — but there’s a catch

When Bowery Capital general partner Loren Straub started talking to a startup from the latest Y Combinator accelerator batch a few months ago, she thought it was strange that the company didn’t have a lead investor for the round it was raising. Even stranger, the founders didn’t seem to be…

1 day ago
In 2024, many Y Combinator startups only want tiny seed rounds — but there’s a catch

The keynote will be focused on Apple’s software offerings and the developers that power them, including the latest versions of iOS, iPadOS, macOS, tvOS, visionOS and watchOS.

Watch Apple kick off WWDC 2024 right here

Welcome to Startups Weekly — Haje’s weekly recap of everything you can’t miss from the world of startups. Anna will be covering for him this week. Sign up here to…

Startups Weekly: Ups, downs, and silver linings

HSBC and BlackRock estimate that the Indian edtech giant Byju’s, once valued at $22 billion, is now worth nothing.

BlackRock has slashed the value of stake in Byju’s, once worth $22 billion, to zero

Apple is set to board the runaway locomotive that is generative AI at next week’s World Wide Developer Conference. Reports thus far have pointed to a partnership with OpenAI that…

Apple’s generative AI offering might not work with the standard iPhone 15

LinkedIn has confirmed it will no longer allow advertisers to target users based on data gleaned from their participation in LinkedIn Groups. The move comes more than three months after…

LinkedIn to limit targeted ads in EU after complaint over sensitive data use

Founders: Need plans this weekend? What better way to spend your time than applying to this year’s Startup Battlefield 200 at TechCrunch Disrupt. With Monday’s deadline looming, this is a…

Startup Battlefield 200 applications due Monday

The company is in the process of building a gigawatt-scale factory in Kentucky to produce its nickel-hydrogen batteries.

Novel battery manufacturer EnerVenue is raising $515M, per filing

Meta is quietly rolling out a new “Communities” feature on Messenger, the company confirmed to TechCrunch. The feature is designed to help organizations, schools and other private groups communicate in…

Meta quietly rolls out Communities on Messenger

Featured Article

Siri and Google Assistant look to generative AI for a new lease on life

Voice assistants in general are having an existential moment, and generative AI is poised to be the logical successor.

2 days ago
Siri and Google Assistant look to generative AI for a new lease on life

Education software provider PowerSchool is being taken private by investment firm Bain Capital in a $5.6 billion deal.

Bain to take K-12 education software provider PowerSchool private in $5.6B deal

Shopify has acquired Threads.com, the Sequoia-backed Slack alternative, Threads said on its website. The companies didn’t disclose the terms of the deal but said that the Threads.com team will join…

Shopify acquires Threads (no, not that one)

Featured Article

Bangladeshi police agents accused of selling citizens’ personal information on Telegram

Two senior police officials in Bangladesh are accused of collecting and selling citizens’ personal information to criminals on Telegram.

2 days ago
Bangladeshi police agents accused of selling citizens’ personal information on Telegram

Carta, a once-high-flying Silicon Valley startup that loudly backed away from one of its businesses earlier this year, is working on a secondary sale that would value the company at…

Carta’s valuation to be cut by $6.5 billion in upcoming secondary sale

Boeing’s Starliner spacecraft has successfully delivered two astronauts to the International Space Station, a key milestone in the aerospace giant’s quest to certify the capsule for regular crewed missions.  Starliner…

Boeing’s Starliner overcomes leaks and engine trouble to dock with ‘the big city in the sky’

Rivian needs to sell its new revamped vehicles at a profit in order to sustain itself long enough to get to the cheaper mass market R2 SUV on the road.

Rivian’s path to survival is now remarkably clear

Featured Article

What to expect from WWDC 2024: iOS 18, macOS 15 and so much AI

Apple is hoping to make WWDC 2024 memorable as it finally spells out its generative AI plans.

2 days ago
What to expect from WWDC 2024: iOS 18, macOS 15 and so much AI

As WWDC 2024 nears, all sorts of rumors and leaks have emerged about what iOS 18 and its AI-powered apps and features have in store.

What to expect from Apple’s AI-powered iOS 18 at WWDC 2024

Apple’s annual list of what it considers the best and most innovative software available on its platform is turning its attention to the little guy.

Apple’s Design Awards highlight indies and startups

Meta launched its Meta Verified program today along with other features, such as the ability to call large businesses and custom messages.

Meta rolls out Meta Verified for WhatsApp Business users in Brazil, India, Indonesia and Colombia