Jews

What is doxing, and how can you protect yourself?

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 13, 2024

The government response comes after the public release of almost 600 names and private chat logs of a WhatsApp group of Australian Jewish creative artists discussing the Israel-Hamas war.

Key Points: 
  • The government response comes after the public release of almost 600 names and private chat logs of a WhatsApp group of Australian Jewish creative artists discussing the Israel-Hamas war.
  • While we wait for new penalties for doxers under the federal Privacy Act review, understanding doxing and its harms can help.

What is doxing?

  • This includes information that may put users at risk of harm, especially names, addresses, employment details, medical or financial records, and names of family members.
  • The Australian government currently defines doxing as the “malicious release” of people’s private information without their consent.
  • Doxing began as a form of unmasking anonymous users, trolls and those using hate speech while hiding behind a pseudonym.

Why is doxing harmful?

  • In the context of the Israel-Hamas war, doxing has affected both Jewish and pro-Palestinian communities and activists in Australia and abroad.
  • From a broader perspective, doxing also damages the digital ecology, reducing people’s ability to freely participate in public or even private debate through social media.
  • Studies have shown doxing particularly impacts women, including those using dating apps or experiencing family violence.

What can you do to protect yourself from doxing?

  • Some experts believe that the fear of punishment can help shape better online behaviours.
  • And you can also protect yourself without needing to entirely withdraw from social media:


never share a home or workplace address, phone number or location, including among a private online group or forum with trusted people
restrict your geo-location settings
avoid giving details of workplaces, roles or employment on public sites not related to your work
avoid adding friends or connections on social media services of people you do not know
if you suspect you risk being doxed due to a heated online argument, temporarily shut down or lock any public profiles
avoid becoming a target by pursuing haters when it reaches a certain point. Professional and courteous engagement can help avoid the anger of those who might disagree and try to harm you.

  • Employers who require their staff to have online profiles or engage with the public should provide information and strategies for doing so safely.
  • Read more:
    As use of digital platforms surges, we'll need stronger global efforts to protect human rights online


Rob Cover receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

Flinn Foundation Adds Two Phoenix Business Leaders to Its Board of Directors

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 12, 2024

Arizona business leaders Chris Camacho and Adam Goodman—the heads of Greater Phoenix Economic Council and Goodmans, respectively—have been elected to the Flinn Foundation board of directors.

Key Points: 
  • Arizona business leaders Chris Camacho and Adam Goodman—the heads of Greater Phoenix Economic Council and Goodmans, respectively—have been elected to the Flinn Foundation board of directors.
  • Goodman represents the third generation to lead the Goodmans family business, a furniture and office design company.
  • “Both Chris and Adam are dynamic, innovative leaders whose energy and expertise in economic development and business will be strong additions to the Flinn board of directors,” said Tammy McLeod, Ph.D., Flinn Foundation president and CEO.
  • The first meeting for Camacho and Goodman as members of the Flinn Foundation board of directors will be in March.

How memes transformed from pics of cute cats to health disinformation super-spreaders

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 12, 2024

Our research shows that memes form part of a highly sophisticated strategy to spread and monetise health disinformation.

Key Points: 
  • Our research shows that memes form part of a highly sophisticated strategy to spread and monetise health disinformation.
  • Dismissing them as harmless jokes is to grossly underestimate their influence – and bolsters their power to spread potentially harmful health messages.

Anti-vaccine memes have a long history


Memes aren’t a recent invention. They have featured prominently in anti-vaccination messaging for centuries.
When widespread smallpox immunisation began in the early 19th century, political cartoons published in print media used memes (see image below) to evoke fear about the safety of the vaccine.

  • The meme “vaccines cause autism”, which appeared on billboards and was circulated widely in the media, provoked doubts about the safety of the vaccine.
  • The internet enables memes to be created anonymously, repurposed and shared at scale – making them a highly effective medium for spreading health disinformation.
  • Memes play an integral role in disinformation campaigns by facilitating fear, uncertainty and doubt.

Influencers and money

  • Our study analysed how popular anti-vaccine influencers used memes to galvanise the anti-vaccine movement during the COVID pandemic.
  • First, memes were used to vilify the government and social institutions, portraying them as corrupt and politically compromised.
  • Influencers suggested the unvaccinated were being persecuted, using evocative imagery to imply a false equivalence between those who remain unvaccinated by choice and the persecution of Jews during the Holocaust.
  • Vaccination was associated with infertility, low sex drive and a lack of critical thinking.
  • To establish group membership and promote a sense of belonging, influencers referred to those who are anti vaccines as their “soul family”.

Going viral – and avoiding challenge

  • Several influencers provided their followers with “meme drops”: packages of memes with dissemination instructions.
  • These memes were tested and produced in meme factories, then distributed monthly to a mass audience via personal newsletters and websites, encouraging followers to spread anti-vaccination content.
  • By adapting memes to current affairs, influencers increased their relevance and likelihood of going viral.
  • Under the protective guise of humour and satire, memes can evade fact checkers and content moderators while promoting anti-vaccine myths and unauthorised treatments.
  • Memes may not look threatening – but that’s why they are such effective super spreaders of health disinformation.


The authors do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

‘America is the mother of terrorism’: why the Houthis’ new slogan is important for understanding the Middle East

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 12, 2024

As their attacks have intensified, the group’s slogan (or sarkha, meaning “scream”) has also gained notoriety.

Key Points: 
  • As their attacks have intensified, the group’s slogan (or sarkha, meaning “scream”) has also gained notoriety.
  • Banners bearing the sarkha dot the streets in areas of Yemen under Houthi control and are brandished by supporters at their rallies.
  • Read more:
    Why US strikes will only embolden the Houthis, not stop their attacks on ships in the Red Sea

Terror groups as a tool of the state

  • Some experts argue this may create more “terrorists” than it kills.
  • However, there are other layers to these slogans that are less intuitively understood by a Western audience.
  • For many in the region, groups like al-Qaeda and Islamic State function, in part, as “tools” that Western-backed authoritarian leaders use to maintain their power.


releasedal-Qaeda prisoners so they could regroup
facilitated al-Qaeda attacks against local and foreign targets
misdirected US strikes to kill political opponents rather than al-Qaeda leaders.

  • As a result, many Yemenis wouldn’t view al-Qaeda or Islamic State as being completely separate from those in charge of the country.
  • In the West, these groups are framed as rebels seeking to overturn the state.
  • But across the region, many believe these relationships defy simple categories like “state versus insurgent” or “friend versus enemy” because terror groups can be both at once.

Why the West’s policies are backfiring

  • When I asked residents about the this, they appeared to see the statement as a banal declaration of fact.
  • (Like the banners bearing the sarkha, the murals used a red barbed-wire font for the word “America”.)
  • Of course, the violence the Houthis use to sustain their own power is an irony that should not be lost.
  • Even so, their messaging taps into widespread views about the drivers of regional violence that some Western observers have long dismissed.


Sarah G. Phillips receives funding from the Australian Research Council (FT200100539). She is a Non-Resident Fellow with the Sana'a Center for Strategic Studies (Yemen).

Gaza update: Netanyahu knocks back Hamas peace plan while the prospect of mass famine looms ever larger

Retrieved on: 
Thursday, February 8, 2024

Unfortunately for many of the 1.7 million people reportedly displaced by Israel’s four-month onslaught in Gaza, this is where more than a million of them have taken refuge, according to the latest estimates.

Key Points: 
  • Unfortunately for many of the 1.7 million people reportedly displaced by Israel’s four-month onslaught in Gaza, this is where more than a million of them have taken refuge, according to the latest estimates.
  • Insisting that “the day after [the war] is the day after Hamas – all of Hamas”, Netanyahu said he intended to press on until Israel had achieved “total victory”.
  • His personal approval ratings are abysmal – only 15% of Israelis in a recent survey said they thought he should keep his job after the war ends.
  • Despite Netanyahu’s wholesale rejection of the notion of Palestinian statehood, both the US and UK have said they are considering the possibility of recognising Palestine after the conflict ends.
  • The UK foreign secretary, David Cameron, said such a move would be “absolutely vital for the long-term peace and security of the region”.
  • Read more:
    UK and US may recognise state of Palestine after Gaza war – what this important step would mean

    So what is the two-state solution?

  • Read more:
    Explainer: what is the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

War crime and punishment

  • The ICJ ordered Israel to take steps to prevent genocidal actions in Gaza, to punish incitement to genocide, to allow Gaza’s people access to humanitarian aid, and to preserve and collect any evidence of war crimes committed during the conflict.
  • He writes that it has been a tactic of war for centuries, and that sieges and blockades remain part of the arsenal of armed conflict.
  • It is also a collective punishment – something explicitly banned under international humanitarian law.
  • Read more:
    Gaza: weaponisation of food has been used in conflicts for centuries – but it hasn't always resulted in victory

There goes the neighbourhood

  • In Iran, the Islamic Republic presides over a parlous economy and considerable public unrest as the “woman, life, freedom” mass protests continue.
  • In the White House, meanwhile, Joe Biden wants a telegenic show of US force without embroiling his country in a major land war.
  • Read more:
    How Iran controls a network of armed groups to pursue its regional strategy

    Gaza Update is available as a fortnightly email newsletter.

Explainer: what is the two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?

Retrieved on: 
Tuesday, February 6, 2024

However, the two-state solution is now further away than it has ever been, with some even proclaiming it “dead”.

Key Points: 
  • However, the two-state solution is now further away than it has ever been, with some even proclaiming it “dead”.
  • But what actually is the two-state solution and why do so many see this as the only resolution to the conflict?

What is the two-state solution?

  • The first attempt at creating side-by-side states occurred before the independence of Israel in 1948.
  • More than 700,000 Palestinians were displaced from the new state of Israel, fleeing to the West Bank, Gaza and surrounding Arab states.
  • This would mean the new Palestinian state would consist of the West Bank prior to Israeli settlement, and Gaza.
  • How Jerusalem would be split, if at all, has been a significant point of contention in this plan.

Why is statehood so important?

  • The kind of statehood referred to in the two-state solution, known as state sovereignty in international politics, is the authority given to the government of a nation within and over its borders.
  • The vast majority of people on Earth live in or legally fall under the jurisdiction of a sovereign state.
  • More than 160 members of the UN now recognise Israel; those who do not include Syria, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Malaysia and Indonesia.
  • As such, the self-determination of Palestinians through the creation of a sovereign state has been a cornerstone of Palestinian political action for decades.

The closest the two sides got – the Oslo Accords

  • Negotiations began largely as a result of Palestinian uprisings across the West Bank and Gaza.
  • In 1993, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and the head of the Palestinian Liberation Organisation (PLO) Yasser Arafat met in Oslo and signed the first of two agreements called the Oslo Accords.
  • The Oslo II Accord was signed in 1995, detailing the subdivision of administrative areas in the occupied territories.
  • And over the next few decades, the two-state solution has only become harder to achieve for various reasons, including:


the rise of conservative governments in Israel and lack of effective political pressure from the US
the shrinking political influence of the Palestinian Authority under Mahmoud Abbas and the rise of Hamas in Gaza, which caused a political split between the two Palestinian territories
Hamas’ vows to annihilate Israel and refusal to recognise the Israeli state as legitimate
the continued growth of Israeli settlements in the West Bank, which has turned the territory into an ever-shrinking series of small enclaves connected by military checkpoints
dwindling support among both Israelis and Palestinians for the model
continued political violence on both sides.
And of course there is Netanyahu – no individual has done more to undermine the two-state solution than the current Israeli leader and his party. In 2010, a leaked recording from 2001 came to light where Netanyahu claimed to have “de facto put an end to the Oslo accords”.

What alternatives are there?

  • There aren’t many alternatives and all of them have significant problems.
  • Although Arabs already make up around 20% of Israel’s current population, the one-state solution would not be politically feasible.
  • According to Zionist ideology, Israel must always remain a majority Jewish state and granting Palestinians citizenship in the occupied territories would undermine this.


Andrew Thomas does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

A first-ever "Indigenous Embassy" opened in Jerusalem hosted by Friends of Zion Heritage center

Retrieved on: 
Monday, February 5, 2024

The Indigenous Embassy Jerusalem hosted by Friends of Zion Heritage center in center of Jerusalem.

Key Points: 
  • The Indigenous Embassy Jerusalem hosted by Friends of Zion Heritage center in center of Jerusalem.
  • Naturally, the Indigenous Embassy which opened in Jerusalem would operate in its campus.
  • Hassan-Nahoum thanked the Friends of Zion and Dr. Mike Evans "for being a visionary of what a Friend of Zion actually means."
  • Friends of Zion Heritage center was established in 2015, in the center of Israel's capital Jerusalem, by founder Dr. Mike Evans.

Press release - Holocaust Remembrance Day: “Hitler did not win!”

Retrieved on: 
Sunday, February 4, 2024

On Thursday, Irene Shashar, a survivor of the Warsaw ghetto, addressed MEPs in a plenary session in Brussels to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Key Points: 
  • On Thursday, Irene Shashar, a survivor of the Warsaw ghetto, addressed MEPs in a plenary session in Brussels to commemorate International Holocaust Remembrance Day.
  • “We pay tribute today to the victims of the Holocaust and reaffirm our unwavering commitment against antisemitism, racism and other forms of hate.
  • Living in Israel today, she said, “I was blessed with the opportunity to have children and grandchildren.
  • After 7 October “the resurgence of antisemitism means that the hate of the past is still with us”, Ms Shashar warned.

Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles Awards $1.1 Million to Address Infant and Maternal Health

Retrieved on: 
Wednesday, January 17, 2024

The Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles ( The Foundation ) today announced that it has awarded a total of $1.1 million to seven local nonprofits addressing infant and maternal health, mainly focused on racial disparities in maternal health care for Black families in Los Angeles.

Key Points: 
  • The Jewish Community Foundation of Los Angeles ( The Foundation ) today announced that it has awarded a total of $1.1 million to seven local nonprofits addressing infant and maternal health, mainly focused on racial disparities in maternal health care for Black families in Los Angeles.
  • In citing its rationale behind these grants, The Foundation pointed to an alarming statistic: due to systemic inequities in our health system, Black mothers and infants in the United States and Los Angeles, in particular, die at more than double the rate of their white counterparts.
  • The Foundation’s General Community Grants sustain programs focused on high-priority issues throughout Los Angeles.
  • Over the past decade, The Foundation has awarded nearly $6 million through this initiative.

Scientology Churches Honor the Memory of Victims of the Holocaust

Retrieved on: 
Saturday, January 27, 2024

LOS ANGELES, Jan. 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Each year, Scientology Churches hold conferences and open house events to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day and honor the memory of the victims of the Holocaust on the anniversary of the 1945 liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp. Historians estimate some 1.1 million men, women, and children were murdered in Auschwitz between 1940 and 1945.

Key Points: 
  • LOS ANGELES, Jan. 27, 2024 /PRNewswire/ -- Each year, Scientology Churches hold conferences and open house events to mark International Holocaust Remembrance Day and honor the memory of the victims of the Holocaust on the anniversary of the 1945 liberation of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp.
  • With the bulk of Holocaust survivors now in their 80s and 90s, Scientologists believe it is vital that their stories not be forgotten.
  • The Scientology Network features The Age of Fear on International Holocaust Remembrance Day January 27 at 8 p.m. ET/PT.
  • Since launching with an introduction by Scientology ecclesiastical leader Mr. David Miscavige in March 2018, the Scientology Network has been viewed in 237 countries and territories in 17 languages.