8 Ways You Can Greatly Lower Your Chances Of Being Doxxed By The Thought Police

We live in a day and age where left wing extremists and blue-haired cunts feel like they’re doing a public service by making life hell for masculine men who make no apologies for refusing to date transgenders or standing against open borders. A good example of this is when Roosh was banned from the UK for speaking out against militant homosexuality, even though he hasn’t called for violence, has no criminal record, and in general is not a threat.

If you’re on Twitter, you’ve probably seen the phrase “Twitter do ya thing”, where low IQ millennials attempt to get Trump supporters fired and blacklisted from their careers by calling their place of work or school. While there is no such thing 100% anonymity when a telecommunications device is involved, there are some basic, common sense steps you can take to avoid being a victim.

1. Use a reliable VPN

A VPN encrypts the traffic between your computer and network in addition to hiding your IP address. Using a VPN ensures trolls can’t find your real IP address and then call your internet service provider to gain information about you through social engineering. The US recently passed a law allowing ISP’s to sell your data to marketers for profit, so at this point using a paid VPN service that doesn’t keep logs is just good internet hygiene.

2. Register your social media accounts under pseudonyms and burner email addresses

Just by operating your social media accounts or blog under an alias, you take away 90% of what the left-wing mob has to work with. While I’m not saying they deserved it, most of the people who are successfully doxed by gender fluid womyn’s studies majors have far too much pointless personal information on their profiles. You posting under your legal name and having your exact city in your bio is pointless info that can only serve to harm you.

3. Do not click on suspicious links

It sounds painfully simple, but one of the most popular ways Anonymous-affiliated basement dwellers glean information such as your IP Address or remotely install a keylogger onto your device is by sending you a URL via direct message to click on.

Do not click on any weird looking URL’s, in fact, don’t click any URL’s at all. Ask the message sender what the URL is about, then Google it yourself. Frequent scans of your devices with programs like Malwarebytes can’t hurt.

4. Max out your privacy settings across all of your devices and social media accounts

Friends list? Private. Email address? Private. Workplace? Don’t post it. Date of birth? Private. Limit advertising tracker? On. Location Services? ALWAYS off for photos. An experienced cybers-stalker’s favorite way to find their victim’s home address is by analyzing the metadata of a photo.

This isn’t a cybersecurity blog so I won’t get too technical but you can save yourself from a great headache by going into your device’s location settings and making sure your camera never uses location info.

5. Use two-Factor authentication when possible

Even the most experienced cyber vandal will have a hard time getting into your iCloud account with that video of you throwing up in a back alley after getting shitfaced drunk if it requires a code to be sent to your phone in tandem with a password.

6. Use a password manager

Roboform password manager

There are several very cheap password managers out there that generate almost impenetrably strong, unique passwords for each individual site. In addition, most will notify you when a website you have an account on has had a data breach and your password has been leaked.

This is critical because many people use the same weak password for each individual site, and legions of dorks like Anonymous have access to lists of leaked passwords and email addresses, which they keep a record of to ‘try their luck’ in case someone uses the same credentials elsewhere.

7. Audit yourself

A great website to find out how much information about you is out there is Pipl. Go to Pipl and search your name, email address, and any current or former usernames you’ve used on social media. See if they match each other. For example, if your name or true email address pops up when you search a username of yours, then you’re liable to get doxed if you piss someone off.

8. Remove Yourself

If you live in the United States, chances are your name, home/email addresses, and phone number are being sold for profit among data brokers and people search websites. Some have more of their personal information out there than others but chances are if this is the first you’ve heard of this, you have more info about you that’s readily available online than you would like. Use Expeal to make sure your information isn’t displayed.

Thankfully if you’re a US Resident these sites are required by law to comply with your opt-out request and if you’re an EU Resident, it may be illegal for them to even collect the info in the first place.

Conclusion

Thankfully for us, our opponents aren’t very smart or resourceful people. If you practice basic common sense, you most likely will never have to worry about this happening to you.

Read More: How To Securely Communicate And Meet With Thought Criminals

39 thoughts on “8 Ways You Can Greatly Lower Your Chances Of Being Doxxed By The Thought Police”

  1. 9. Don’t show up to any rally or event that the psycho left is going to even remotely interpret as “racist” or “white supremacist” or involves anything with white identity or drawing attention to the J question.
    Look how badly the lives of the Tiki torch crew at Charlottesville (who had nothing to do with any violent incidents which later took place) have been screwed up thanks to the likes of Shaun King, Tim Wise, etc. who put out major witch hunt campaigns on Twitter to identify them, get them kicked out of university, socially ostracized, and probably rendered unemployable unless they start entirely from scratch with a new legal name.

    1. One of the people doxed at Charlottesville committed suicide back in March.

      1. That’s tied with the number of leftists who were killed at Charlottesville then…
        Yet how many articles and memorials have been written about Heather Hayer?

        1. yeah..someone taking their own life is obviously the same as someone being plowed down by a deranged psychopath.

        2. “deranged psychopath” trying to escape deranged leftists damaging his car and in fear of his life.
          Honestly, the complete radio silence on Alex Fields is one of the most unsettling things which has happened in the past year. The globalist media is desperate to not let him get his side of the story out.

        3. Did the car at least brush against her? She died of a heart attack from her morbid obesity, her 500lb walrus body couldn’t handle the sudden spikes in blood pressure.

      2. Apparently this guy had degrees in mathematics and electrical engineering, and he worked in nuclear engineering. He had the potential to contribute more to civilization than a typical unemployable Antifa slug could have in a dozen lifetimes.

    2. I keep telling these white nationalist guys that they need to protect themselves financially by getting out of debt and saving up a year’s living expenses in Fuck-You money. Show that white agency, competency and future-orientation you talk so much about.

    3. Sad to see the top comment is telling you to be quiet, take it in the ass, let your brothers in arms stand alone, and be scared of the consequences. Obviously don’t fucking extend your identity on a silver platter with a bow on it, but if they fixate on your identity, then deal with it like a man, life is a continuous struggle. Being afraid shouldn’t stop you from speaking the truth. Otherwise, we’re no different than Antifa cowards who hide behind masks, and the (((government))) that protects them, but they somehow “despise”.
      The best possible way to handle SJW’s, (((media))) and doxxers is by not giving a fuck, they thrive on making you feel bad, they want misery, and I can’t promise you that they’ll see your devil may care attitude and leave you alone, but I can promise you, that if they did mess with your life, at least you handled it like a man.
      Think about what your potential or existing children will think of you on your death bed, do you want to be the cringeworthy cuck who will be remembered for being forced to admit he’s “wrong” and apologized publicly for being politically incorrect? Or do you want to be guy who went down swinging? But of course, going down is an exaggeration, since the worst they can do, is just have us explain ourselves to our professors/bosses, and at the truly very worst, we lose a job, but oh well, we move on and find another.
      Attend rallies, stand with your brothers and sisters, and speak your minds damn you!!!!

    1. In our day-to-day lives do any of us admit we feel this way on this site.
      We share our opinions with strangers here, whom we will never met.
      In some ways it has been like living in the catacombs of Rome with other Christians.

      1. shawn
        “In our day-to-day lives do any of us admit we feel this way on this site.”
        Me.
        I don’t care what people think. But I never talk about these things unless a conversation heads in that direction. Or if someone asks me. But, yeah, I talk about the things in real life, express the same viewpoints as I do on ROK.
        I don’t hide who I am.

        1. Indeed, I do the same myself, I am not going to lie, I’ve alienated myself from a couple of friends, but the reality is, if the truth bothers them that much, are they even worth being your friends?

  2. 1. Do NOT do social media of any kind.
    2. For residential internet users, reboot your router occasionally. This should give you a fresh IP (unless you need a static IP from your provider). That makes it harder to track you down although the way most ISP’s assign even DHCP addresses you are still giving up your general geographic location.
    3. Consider using public wifi like at coffee shops and restaurants. These are hard to trace. There is an establishment close to me where I can get a decent signal from a park bench across the street. Since Starbucks are essentially private homeless shelters now, if you can endure the stench, another great use of their free wifi without having to spend $5 on junk coffee.
    4. Don’t name your devices things like (personal name – device type) or anything that can be traced to you or logged for consistency. In fact change your device name every month or so. Makes running logs and reports more difficult.
    5. Change your passwords frequently, at least once a month. My “password manager” is a small notebook I keep locked up at home. Online or application password managers can be hacked. The only way my manual password manager can get hacked is if it is physical stolen.
    6. Realize a private conversation is sometimes worth the hassle of meeting face to face. Every time you send an email or make an entry on social media you are essentially creating a permanent record. Telephone calls are a great alternative in a pinch but you are still creating a record and there are many apps that now record calls which is legal in many states without notice. A private conversation in a car, assuming the people you are talking to are not trying to set you up, is by far the safest means of communication these days.

  3. I don’t live in the Dystopic States of America. I live in a shithole country which doesn’t give a fuck about what u do on the web, in fact the average sentence for murder here is like 3-4 years, so yeah 99 problems but thoughtcrime aint one for me!

    1. #MeToo
      As long as I post I love my King and my General, I’m good to go.
      (Pretty much all of Asia is like this, don’t dissent against the military)
      I can hate on any races or other thoughts I like, beat my wife, impregnate random women, etc. and nobody cares.

  4. How about this for a tip:
    Don’t use social media at all. Masculine men are meant to be outdoors, not debating with pea-brained idiots over the internet.
    The only reason I use the internet is to gather information, read RoK, and check my email. Anything else is extraneous and more than likely degenerate nonsense. Just take a look at the Yahoo homepage and you’ll see what I mean.

  5. I was doxxed and posted on the dirty 3 years ago I got nik Richie to remove the post and he ended up doxxing the girl poster . Karma … I was hoping some capt save a hoes would come to my house . I’m heavily weaponized

  6. Just avoid social media. Problem solved. Seriously, if you have a facebook or twitter account, you are literally a cuck.

  7. Great article! But I would also add an additional but extremely important advice:
    9) Avoid using propietary Oses if you can:
    Like Windows and Mac not only they are way easier for hackers to invade but also most viruses are made off to attack those operating system. Lack of privacy is also an issue in both, especially Windows. Microsoft, Apple and their partners are collecting all your activity, while using those Oses. I know most ROK readers are not very tech savvy but hey If you can try migrate to Linux based Oses as soon as you can you will be way more safe from viruses, spyware and adware. Debian, Ubuntu and Deepin Os are really good alternatives.

  8. 9. Use Linux or Qubes or Tails or any other secure operating system. Qubes in particular is great for having multiple isolated VMs which can even run via separate VPN circuits.
    https://www.qubes-os.org/

    1. Be aware that the qubes OS was started by this butt ugly, men hatin’, Polish feminazi: https://www.qubes-os.org/attachment/site/team-joanna.jpg, for this reason I will pass on it. Israeli hackers got into Kaspersky’s computers using some software that resides in the RAM, independent of the OS. Whatever hacking and decryption capabilities governments have they will of course never make it known to the public. To sum it up- you don’t need qubes to not get doxxed and be safe from basement dwelling hackers whilst big government players- US, China, Russia etc. may be more capable then they appear.

  9. Another few add:
    10) Boycott Google wherever possible. Don’t use their search engine (DuckDuckGo is a privacy focused alternative), and definitely don’t use Chrome, Edge, IE, etc. Safari is slightly better than the previously mentioned, and Mozilla Firefox is decent.
    11) If you must use Facebook, sign out whenever you’re not actively using it. Facebook tracks literally everything you do until you actually LOG OUT (not just close the browser window).

  10. Skip the password vault software and/or storing passwords in the cloud (or any network)..keep them on a piece of paper, on premises. Old school and analog. Also, don’t have your browser “remember” any of your passwords (that’s hack-able, too).
    It might be a PITA, but I see it as a memory game. I can recall at least 30-40 separate passwords that don’t match. Remembering those and phone numbers is like a lost art these days. People rely on tech to do too much of the remembering for them, which probably creates atrophy in some portion of the brain…modern problems.

    Hate to say it, I really do, but fear of reprisal/doxxing has kept me from submitting juicy articles to ROK.

    1. Doxxing, by way of “name-dropping,” is document (doxx) dropping. It’s publicly exposing someone’s real name or address on the Internet who has taken pains to keep them secret. Also spelled “doxing.”

  11. Excellent article
    Instead of VPN you can also use Torbrowser, if you don’t mind the occasional slow loading of websites. But it’s free.

    1. yes, if you’re in europe you should not only care about what you post but what you browse as well.
      certain websites, like THAT one, you shouldnt access without being protected, especially in germany

  12. don’t be friends online with hardline leftists (or crazy people in general), especially women.
    block them if necessary.
    although in usa you have the first amendment, unfortunately there’s more data of anyone available. you can find adress of anyone doxxed, etc education history, etc

  13. Don’t have ANY pictures on the net, and don’t use a webcam with people you can’t trust.

  14. Some of these suggestions are silly and caveman like. A password manager, VPN, and store all your documents on Cryptomator don’t store anything on an open cloud OR your computer compile it all in the encrypted cloud and you’ll be good. Also scrubbing information from your personal accounts or making ghost accounts for social networking site will suffice just make sure you are using burner names and emails.

  15. My name, address and phone have been online since there’s been an internet. Yes, I have a unique position and do this sort of thing full time. However, there will be a time when most of our people will have to go public and deal with the consequences. I have and still draw breath.
    Its not as bad as you think.

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