JUICYJAM: How Thai Authorities Use Online Doxxing to Suppress Dissent (citizenlab.ca)
from Tea@programming.dev to technology@lemmy.world on 16 Apr 12:43
https://programming.dev/post/28709548

  • Since at least August 2020, a coordinated social media harassment and doxxing campaign targeting the Thai pro-democracy movement has run uninterrupted and unchallenged. We codenamed it JUICYJAM.
  • Thanks to a public leak of confidential military and police documents that occurred in March 2025, we can now attribute the campaign to the Royal Thai Armed Forces and/or the Royal Thai Police, whose online repression efforts have allegedly been merged into a joint “Cyber Team” since 2023.
  • The campaign operates within a broader context of dissent repression tactics, both online and offline, that closely resemble those we have previously analyzed in other regions – such as, for example, in Hong Kong.
  • JUICYJAM’s longstanding, uninterrupted activity over multiple social media platforms (primarily X and Facebook) once again exposes the shortcomings of platforms in creating and enforcing policies on highly coordinated and harmful doxxing campaigns intended to suppress civil society.
  • Platforms’ policies on doxxing seldom consider the behaviour in the context of coordinated – and often state-sponsored – campaigns against civil society. They also do not consider environmental factors, such as the doxxing happening during unrest and protests.

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sunzu2@thebrainbin.org on 16 Apr 16:45 collapse

How about Thai "authorities" doxx some pedos... That would be a use full tactic to combat white trash traveling there for bad reasons