How to Dox Anyone

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How to Dox Anyone - by Joshua Moon - Mad at the Internet

Mad at the Internet

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How to Dox Anyone<br>Liz Fong-Jones, litigious transgender millionaire, knows where you live.

Joshua Moon<br>Jul 05, 2026

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Finding someone’s personally identifying information usually involves that person first making a mistake: creating public posts that can be cross-referenced with public records. Someone with perfect privacy practices could not be ‘doxed’ this way.<br>It is no longer possible to stay anonymous from a dedicated adversary. Liz Fong-Jones, an ex-Google tech millionaire and trans activist, has figured out how to dox anyone who posts online simply by filing a form.<br>Who is Liz Fong-Jones?

Liz Fong-Jones is a former Google employee who is now a fellow with Honeycomb, a tech startup so large it has direct relations with Anthropic, GCP, Azure, and other billion-dollar platforms.<br>In 2019, Liz Fong-Jones was accused of sexual assault and took to Twitter to pen a defense. In short, Jones minimizes the accusations as a simple “consent accident ”: a ridiculous misunderstanding over dog hair. The original victim’s statements have disappeared from the Internet. Coincidentally, Jones is a master of Internet censorship. The Kiwi Farms is the only place that hosts critical information against Liz Fong-Jones, which is why Jones has been dedicated to bringing down the site for almost a full decade.<br>After failing for years, Liz Fong-Jones switched tactics: Sue everyone.

An actual slide from Liz Fong-Jones’s Cambridge university presentation.<br>Five years of history in two sentences: Liz Fong-Jones engaged in a campaign of litigious aggression against people with no direct association to my website, attacked Internet infrastructure by directly contacting the executives of the largest ISPs in the world, and achieved provider-level censorship that the free Internet has never seen prior. We still found ways to stay online.<br>Liz Fong-Jones is a sadistic and intelligent psychopath. He is obsessed with meticulously curating his Internet reputation. At best, he has total disregard for the freedom and well-being of others. At worst, he simply enjoys torturing people of modest means through costly litigation because they’ve ever dared to say a cross word about him on the Internet, or just for being friends with someone who has.<br>On Jun 25, 2026, Liz Fong-Jones has filed a DMCA lawsuit against 10 John Does, claiming that fair use edits of his social media profile deprived him of his rights. These images ranged from critically transformative text overlays about the “consent accident”, to highly reconstructive AI parodies, to MS paint drawings that stayed up for only about an hour. The point is not the copyright, nor any ‘financial harm’: it’s about doxing people. By the time you’re arguing “fair use” in court, you’re already doxed and have spent tens of thousands of dollars; you’ve already lost.<br>To that end, Liz Fong-Jones hired an entire lawfirm (KUSK: Kamerman, Uncyk, Soniker & Klein) to perfect a strategy I will now give you for free. Here’s how to dox anyone.<br>The Liz Fong-Jones Method

DMCA Section 512(h) provides a pre-litigation subpoena process for acquiring subscriber information from any1 service provider in the United States, or anywhere that might honor an American court order. These are proper orders from the Court with the full force and power of the United States Federal Government behind them. They cannot be ignored.<br>These instructions are for educational purposes. Do not break the law or defraud the Court. I am not an attorney and this is not legal advice. Read the law: 17 U.S. Code § 512.<br>Find a service that your target posts on .

Issue a DMCA § 512(c)(3) takedown notice . This is a formal copyright complaint.

Prepare the following documents. AI can generate these.<br>A request to the clerk to issue the subpoena.

A proposed subpoena (Form AO 88B or a court-specific template), directed to the service provider, ordering them to disclose identifying information about the alleged infringer “sufficient for the copyright owner to pursue their rights” (i.e. dox to find them and serve them a lawsuit).

A copy of the § 512(c)(3) notification (or a statement that one was sent).

Include a sworn declaration stating the subpoena will only be used to protect your 17 U.S.C. § 512 rights (copyright only, not defamation).

File with the clerk of any U.S. District Court.

Pay the filing fee . The standard fee is $49.

Wait for it to be granted . The § 512(h) provides no guard rails. The Court will almost always grant it. Northern District of California prints these routinely.

Send the subpoena to the service provider.

Wait for the dox . It’s coming to you on a silver platter. Almost no service provider will pay for lawyers to defend some random guy’s personal information.

That’s all. Unless the target has maintained opsec so good that the U.S. Federal Government wouldn’t be able to subpoena their way to finding them,...

jones fong internet court from subpoena

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