Australia In 2024, the Australian government announced they would introduce new legislation to criminalise doxing due to an
incident in which the personal details of over 600 people from a
WhatsApp group of Jewish Australians was leaked. Some of the people whose details were leaked received threats to harm their reputation as well as death threats. The proposed legislation, which includes a law that makes doxing punishable by jail time, has received bipartisan support, and support from
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. While as of the end of 2024 doxing is no specific offense, the laws mentioned are used in cases of online violence. Since Austria is an
EU-member state,
EU law (
DSGVO) applies.
Mainland China From March 1, 2020, the People's Republic of China's "Regulations on the Ecological Governance of Online Information Content" has been implemented, clarifying that users and producers of online information content services and platforms must not engage in online violence, doxing, deep forgery, data fraud, account manipulation and other illegal activities.
Hong Kong As of 2021, it is a criminal offense in
Hong Kong to dox, where doxing is defined as releasing private or non-public information on a person for the purposes of "threatening, intimidation, harassment or to cause psychological harm". Persons convicted under this statute are liable to imprisonment for up to 5 years, and a fine of HK$1,000,000 (US$128,324.40).
Germany In Germany, doxing was added to the criminal code in September 2021 as '
() (Section 126a of the Criminal Code). Since then, the publication of freely accessible data is punishable by a prison sentence of up to two years or a fine, and the publication of data that is not freely accessible is punishable by a prison sentence of up to three years or a fine. The dissemination of the data and its content must be suitable and, under the circumstances, intended to expose the person concerned or persons close to them to a crime directed against them or another unlawful act against sexual self-determination, physical integrity, personal freedom or against an object of significant value. By referring to Section 86 of the Criminal Code, which criminalizes the ' (), the
endangering dissemination of personal data is not punishable if it is socially appropriate and "the act serves civic education, the defense against unconstitutional efforts, art or science, research or teaching, the reporting on current events or history or similar purposes" (Section 86 Paragraph 4 of the Criminal Code).
Netherlands In 2021, due to increasing doxing incidents targeting Dutch activists, politicians, journalists and others, a new law against doxing was proposed by then
Minister of Justice and Security Ferdinand Grapperhaus. The law states it is a felony to share personal data with the intent of intimidation, harassment or work-hindering and carries a maximum penalty of a two-years prison sentence or a fine of €25,750 (US$28,204). The penalty shall be increased by a third when targeted at certain public figures. The proposed law passed both houses of parliament and went into effect on 1 January 2024. Early in 2025 the
War in Court project digitally released a list of names of nearly half a million suspected wartime Nazi
collaborators.
Russia Under the Article 137 "Invasion of Personal Privacy" public sharing of personal information, using mass media, Internet, even public events, is considered a crime and shall be punishable by a fine of up to eighteen months in wage, or by compulsory labor for a term of up to three hundred sixty hours, or by corrective labor for a term of up to one year, or by forced labor for a term of up to two years. with deprivation of the right to hold certain positions or engage in certain activities for a term of up to three years or without it, or arrest for a term of up to four months, or imprisonment for a term of up to two years with deprivation of the right to hold certain positions or engage in certain activities for a term of up to three years. Copying the information and obtaining it illegally are separate offences as well. In practice, however, due to the ambiguous nature of "unlawful collection" of private information in the statute, legal actions are often based upon article 44 from the same act, which prohibits insulting an individual with derogatory or profane language, and defamation of an individual through the dissemination of either misinformation or privileged factual information that may potentially damage an individual's reputation or honor (which often occurs in a doxing incident). This particular clause enforces harsher maximum sentences than a "traditional" defamation statute existing in the Korean criminal code. It was originally enacted partially in response to the rise in celebrity suicides due to cyberbullying. As established by the Criminal Code's reform in 2015, to "disseminate, disclose or transfer to third parties images or audiovisual recordings of the one obtained with their consent in a home or in any other place out of sight of third parties, when the disclosure seriously undermines the personal privacy of that person", without the authorization of the affected person, is also punished per article 197 § 7 to three months to a year in prison and fines of six to twelve months. The offense is particularly severe
if the victim is linked to the offender by marriage or an "analogous affective relationship", underage, or disabled. Two federal laws exist that could potentially address the problem of doxing: the Interstate Communications Statute and the Interstate Stalking Statute. However, as one scholar has argued, "[t]hese statutes ... are woefully inadequate to prevent doxing because their terms are underinclusive and they are rarely enforced". The Interstate Communications Statute, for example, "only criminalizes explicit threats to kidnap or injure a person". But in many instances of doxing, a doxer may never convey an explicit threat to kidnap or injure, but the victim could still have good reason to be terrified. And the Interstate Stalking Statute "is rarely enforced and it serves only as a hollow protection from online harassment". Several states, notably
California and
Colorado, make doxing illegal under
state law. According to at least one estimate, over three million people are stalked over the internet each year, yet only about three of the attackers are charged under the Interstate Stalking Statute. Accordingly, "[t]his lack of federal enforcement means that the States must step in if doxing is to be reduced." In late 2023 and early 2024, during a
rash of swatting of American politicians, it became widely used as a way of encouraging attacks, as the United States possesses weak laws surrounding
data privacy, with its citizens'
personal information often easily accessible online due to various
data brokers. == See also ==