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In 2006 Austria passed its anti-stalking law, and in 2016 cyber-mobbing became a criminal offense. [34] While as of the end of 2024 doxing is no specific offense, the laws mentioned are used in cases of online violence. [35] Since Austria is an EU-member state, EU law applies. [36]
The BVT existed as a federal office with nine bureaus, one in each of the nine states of Austria, generally located alongside the state police in the capital of each respective state. [citation needed] For oversight of the BVT, the Austrian National Council created a standing subcommittee for internal affairs. [10]
Grenzfurthner's name was one of 200 activists, politicians, and artists from Germany, Switzerland and Austria (only one of a total of 10 Austrian names) that were published on an ultra-right doxing list distributed on a variety of online platforms in December 2018 and January 2019.
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Döbling (German pronunciation: [ˈdøːblɪŋ] ⓘ) is the 19th district in the city of Vienna, Austria (German: 19. Bezirk, Döbling, Doebling). It is located in the north of Vienna, north of the districts Alsergrund and Währing. [3] Döbling has some heavily populated urban areas with many residential buildings, and borders the Vienna Woods.
Doxing incident [ edit ] In January 2017, users of the imageboard website 8chan leaked the identities of several of its key contributors, including Enoch, and revealed that his wife was Jewish [ 17 ] [ 18 ] and that their wedding had featured traditional Jewish rites and chanting. [ 5 ]
The Documentation Centre of Austrian Resistance was founded on February 11, 1963, by Ludwig Jedlicka [], August Maria Knoll [], Paul Schärf, Ludwig Soswinski [] and Herbert Steiner [], former members of the Austrian resistance, victims of NS-persecution, and committed scholars from the sciences and humanities.
Eichmann boasted that the number of "Jews forced to emigrate" had been increased to 350 per day; by the end of September 1938, 38,000 Jews had left Austria legally. [5] Reinhard Heydrich stated on 12 November 1938 that the total number had already increased up to 45,000. [6] The costs of the forced emigration would be paid for by the victims.