Some time ago, we were contacted by a group fighting against online CSAM, demanding that AdGuard DNS blocks the Archive.today website. This was only the beginning of a much larger story…
Their response seems to be arguing against a claim that AdGuard didn’t even make. AdGuard acknowledged the existence of CSAM and reported it to archive.today. What they brought into question was whether WAAD was a legitimate organization as opposed to something shady.
In their article, AdGuard published the registration address and the email of WAAD, as well as the
names of the directors, and distributed confidential emails while openly defaming our actions, our
structure, and the bailiff.
Publishing the public details of an organization, like its director and the email address, are not doxxing. Emails cannot be made confidential without an agreement on both sides, and French law, even if it does protect communications between French people, cannot extend beyond France.
Defamation also is a very strong claim to make here. I can’t speak for European law, nor am I a lawyer of course, but in the US, defamation usually needs to not only be harmful, but knowingly false. AdGuard doesn’t know who you are, nor have they made any false statements. The law they quoted also says “with an intent to harm” which is clearly not the case here, though they have shown reason to assume you have intent to harm archive.today.
AdGuard publicly declared that all reported URLs had been removed.
Our technical checks show that part of this content is still accessible on Archive.today and its mirrors.
The fuck is a “technical check”? Maybe clear your cache? I don’t want to know what these URLs are, but I can guarantee they don’t start with https://adguard-dns.io/.
Their response seems to be arguing against a claim that AdGuard didn’t even make. AdGuard acknowledged the existence of CSAM and reported it to archive.today. What they brought into question was whether WAAD was a legitimate organization as opposed to something shady.
Publishing the public details of an organization, like its director and the email address, are not doxxing. Emails cannot be made confidential without an agreement on both sides, and French law, even if it does protect communications between French people, cannot extend beyond France.
Defamation also is a very strong claim to make here. I can’t speak for European law, nor am I a lawyer of course, but in the US, defamation usually needs to not only be harmful, but knowingly false. AdGuard doesn’t know who you are, nor have they made any false statements. The law they quoted also says “with an intent to harm” which is clearly not the case here, though they have shown reason to assume you have intent to harm archive.today.
The fuck is a “technical check”? Maybe clear your cache? I don’t want to know what these URLs are, but I can guarantee they don’t start with
https://adguard-dns.io/.