If you list your organizational affiliation on LinkedIn (and if you are indeed correct that Paradigm Academy was not trying to be a cover for Leverage Research that shielded it from public scrutiny), then I don’t think you get to complain when someone quickly googles you and finds your LinkedIn profile.
First, as I noted in my response to Ben, some of the information included in the doxing was from the poster’s personal knowledge and not from the people’s LinkedIn profiles. Thus, you can’t defend the doxing by saying that the information was publicly available. It simply wasn’t.
Second, I am not complaining about someone quickly googling anyone and finding their LinkedIn profile. I am complaining about making it easier to harass people by posting a central repository of information about those people on a forum frequented by people with a history of harassing them.
It is certainly the case that former Leveragers took the release of their names on the EA forum as an attempt to invite harassment by members of the EA community. We were contacted by former Leveragers to see if there was anything we could do to get the names removed for this very reason.
I suspect the actual crux of the discussion here is that most EAs are unaware of the history of poor and bizarre behavior towards Leverage/Paradigm by members of the EA community. To help with the knowledge gap, I’m considering writing a Twitter thread that will share some of the most egregious examples.
First, as I noted in my response to Ben, some of the information included in the doxing was from the poster’s personal knowledge and not from the people’s LinkedIn profiles. Thus, you can’t defend the doxing by saying that the information was publicly available. It simply wasn’t.
Second, I am not complaining about someone quickly googling anyone and finding their LinkedIn profile. I am complaining about making it easier to harass people by posting a central repository of information about those people on a forum frequented by people with a history of harassing them.
It is certainly the case that former Leveragers took the release of their names on the EA forum as an attempt to invite harassment by members of the EA community. We were contacted by former Leveragers to see if there was anything we could do to get the names removed for this very reason.
I suspect the actual crux of the discussion here is that most EAs are unaware of the history of poor and bizarre behavior towards Leverage/Paradigm by members of the EA community. To help with the knowledge gap, I’m considering writing a Twitter thread that will share some of the most egregious examples.