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ARTICLE: 'How to avoid doxing yourself: online safety for harm reduction communities'

(Wordy)

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This thread is for discussion of the article 'How to avoid doxing yourself: online safety for harm reduction communities' by Travis McCullough.

Feel free to post your thoughts about the article, any further suggestions regarding online safety, and/or any questions you might have.

Here in the Bluelight Article Discussion forum, we also invite article authors to respond to the discussion.

Constructive criticism and civil debate are welcome; however, abusive comments will not be tolerated. The Bluelight User Agreement (BLUA) applies, as it does across our site. :)
 
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I See What You Are Saying, But Although The Internet Seems Anonymous, It Hardly Is. As For Me, I Was Doxed Out At The Hive (someone posted my real name) And Later On Bluelight (in a newspaper article with my real name). Nothing Particularly Bad Came Of It Either Time, Though.
 
I See What You Are Saying, But Although The Internet Seems Anonymous, It Hardly Is. As For Me, I Was Doxed Out At The Hive (someone posted my real name) And Later On Bluelight (in a newspaper article with my real name). Nothing Particularly Bad Came Of It Either Time, Though.
I'm also 'out' in terms of this account being associated with my real name. But I am also not posting info about personal illegal activities here.

Worth noting that doxxing someone on Bluelight is against our terms of use, and is considered a serious offence on this site. As most people are doing their best to remain anonymous. But this is obviously a different case for those of us who are 'out'.
 
Interesting and informative read, I took a lot away from it for sure, learned alot.. that said, I've knowingly doxxed myself here via media posts and my posts here on Bluelight lol. But I'm also moving fully within the law these days, since being released from my incarceration in 2023. I smoke legal weed, go to a methadone clinic, and that's it. But this is great info to put out to the community! Let's face it, even in today's world, most of us here still have to deal with issues of legality given our habits and hobbies... Perhaps a sticky link to this in NMI? Either way, big props to the author. 🙂
 
https://privacytools.io - For anyone wanting to take this to the next level of seriousness with anonymity and such. There is also a fellow in the BL Telegram who is pretty savvy with this I came across once, but I forget his username on there unfortunately.

Honestly though, by now, most of us can probably be "found out" via stylometry of our posts/replies here and what is available in the way of our social media posts (or texts and/or emails for anyone who manages to gain access to those things.) So, for many who think they are "hidden," they are often not. Its just a matter of someone knowing how to do sylometric analysis that cares to bother. The only way around this would be to use a LLM to do the writing for you in a way that is unidentifiable.
 
I'm also 'out' in terms of this account being associated with my real name. But I am also not posting info about personal illegal activities here.

Worth noting that doxxing someone on Bluelight is against our terms of use, and is considered a serious offence on this site. As most people are doing their best to remain anonymous. But this is obviously a different case for those of us who are 'out'.
To be fair: Drug use and possession are basically victimless “crimes,” and law enforcement doesn’t care about people posting online about MDMA, opioids, or tripping. They want convictions, which means flipping mid-level distributors—not hassling users.

Talking about manufacturing or dealing is another matter (and not allowed on Bluelight anyway). Same with doxxing—good rules on both. Doxxing is just a shitty thing to do to someone on a number of levels.

@Rectify – that's messed up someone doxxed you on The Hive. What a scumbag. Shout-out to all my Hive bee homies out there!
 
Nice 🤙 Very well written and informative article, lots of good privacy tips on there. I've thought we should have some kind of general guide like this for a while now.

Personally, I have mostly given up on notions of absolute privacy regarding my interactions on Bluelight, and on the internet in general, a good while back. I have several folks that I've met on here on social media, and so while I mostly don't care if people know my first name, I try to avoid divulging too awfully much anyway. I'm just not good at it though, so whatever, I'm not going to stress about it.

I do have a real reason for caring a little bit less than the standard person though. I'm just tired of living in a world in which the discussing of drug use, drug safety, and mental health are relegated to dark alleyways and smoky rooms. This culture of hiding and shaming drug use and pretending it doesn't exist, is a product of the drug war, and it's one of the reasons we have so many social issues and dysfunction with drug addiction and mental health to this day.

I still take a lot of opsec steps with privacy and such, but in a general sense, I don't want to continue to hide who I am and feel some sort of shame about my contributions here. I think this world really needs more everyday, regular working people who are willing to be open about their experiences with substances, mental health, and trauma, because I believe this will set a positive example that will do some work towards undoing some of the antiquated detrimental beliefs about drug use that are still so entrenched in culture. It's not just junkies and homeless people that use drugs, and drug safety knowledge should not be kept in some hidden box under lock and key, everyone needs it, and everyone talks about it, and it's not anything people ought to keep beating themselves up about.

But, I recognize that may seem kind of naive or idealistic, and it's definitely a conscious personal choice that a person needs to make on an individual basis. The threat of negative legal, social, and employment outcomes continue to be very real, and I think internet privacy is something every website like this needs to take seriously and be very aware of.

________________________

This may be helpful to some -

On newer model androids, here are the steps one should take to make sure their camera is not recording their metadata when they take pictures:



- Open the Camera app.



- On the viewfinder, touch the Settings icon (usually represented by a gear symbol).



- Look for the option labeled "Save location" or "Use location tags."



- Turn this option off to disable the embedding of location data in your photos.

For iPhones these are the steps:

Go to Settings > Privacy & Security > Location Services > Camera and select "Never"
 
I don't want to continue to hide who I am and feel some sort of shame about my contributions here. I think this world really needs more everyday, regular working people who are willing to be open about their experiences with substances, mental health, and trauma, because I believe this will set a positive example that will do some work towards undoing some of the antiquated detrimental beliefs about drug use that are still so entrenched in culture.

Really love this. For those of us that can stand up and be counted as a person who either is currently or was formerly using drugs that are currently prohibited and unregulated - we should stand up. And say that this system is not ok and needs to be dismantled and replaced with regulated / safe supply, open conversations and removal of the various practices that stigmatise people who use drugs.

For those of us who can't stand up and identify, and who are more likely to face challenges - or worse, the above opsec tips are really important.

From a research perspective, my colleagues and I wrote a bit about this in this journal article (open access).
 
This is very relevant... (facepalm) When I first joined in 2006, I was naïve about self-doxing (autism) and there wasn't much advice online in the 2000s; all was the wild, wild web. This is an excellent article with great self-censoring methods beyond policy rules. Thanks for posting.
 
^Facts.

I get doxxed I am going to take it outside of bluelight completely. That is my single notice of this policy- more of a guarantee.

Doxxing is a two way street too. You don't want me to know where you sleep - nor do I want you to know where I sleep.

Foia is also a double edged sword. (US at least)
 
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