Data Privacy
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Data Security
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Government
‘Dogequest’ Site Provided Tesla Owners Addresses, Names and Phone Numbers

The White House condemned a now-defunct website that used a Molotov cocktail cursor to display a searchable map of Tesla owners’ personal information, after its creators – claiming to oppose Elon Musk – offered to remove listings only for those who sold their cars.
See Also: New Attacks. Skyrocketing Costs. The True Cost of a Security Breach.
White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt called the site “despicable” Wednesday after reports revealed the site published home addresses, names and phone numbers of nationwide Tesla owners. Reportedly included on the site, named “Dogequest,” was the home address of FBI Director Kash Patel as well as the addresses of employees of the Department of Government Efficiency, a White House unit driving President Donald Trump and Musk’s push to radically shrink the government. The site appeared to have been taken offline by Cloudflare, based on a review by Information Security Media Group, though the company did not respond to a request for comment.
The public doxxing of Tesla owners and DOGE employees comes amid escalating threats against Musk following his leap into national politics as a Trump ally and White House special advisor on slashing the federal workforce. His efforts to take over and shut down federal agencies have sparked backlash from labor unions, lawmakers and national security experts warning of serious risks to both national and economic security (see: Ex-NSA Official: Federal Purge Threatens National Security).
The Associated Press reported there has been a recent uptick in threats targeting Musk and Tesla dealerships across the country – including several vehicles set alight early Tuesday in a Las Vegas repair facility. Musk denounced the attacks during an interview with Fox News’s Sean Hannity Tuesday night, saying: “The reason we are seeing this extreme amount of hatred and violence is because we are actually succeeding in getting rid of corruption and waste.”
The Trump administration has suffered a series of legal setbacks in its push to slash tens of thousands of federal employees after judges ordered agencies to immediately reinstate probationary staff cuts since Trump took office on Jan. 20. Another federal judge ruled Tuesday that the administration’s dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development likely violated the Constitution.
The rulings triggered a scramble across government, with one official telling Information Security Media Group the situation caused uncertainty and confusion at CISA, which is now asking some impacted employees to email their names and Social Security numbers to help facilitate reinstatement (see: CISA Rehires Fired Employees, Immediately Puts Them on Leave).
Musk’s efforts to reduce the government have stoked security fears, with filings in ongoing lawsuits against DOGE showing how staffers have allegedly been sharing unencrypted troves of data with senior Trump administration officials. A U.S. District Court judge for the Southern District of New York recently determined that DOGE’s access to certain federal systems left the Treasury Department division tasked with dispensing trillions of dollars annually “more vulnerable to hacking.”
The FBI and DOGE did not immediately respond to requests for comment.