On a tangent - I'd certainly never heard of the other people mentioned in the doxxing article. The academic agricultural scientist, Kevin Folta, appeared on a pretty engaging (quite long)
podcast here.
After digging around a bit further I do sympathise with his experience. He seems like a guy who wants study ag biotech and communicate its potential benefits, and thus has come under scrutiny from anti-GMO fundamentalists.
Unlike BPS researchers, he promptly released all information requested. People fished in it to find that he, an industrial researcher, does have some connection to industry in his area of study, and used that to vilify him.
Food production brings in to play such a vast set of global political, economic, and ecological issues that merit careful consideration. It is quite counterproductive to fixate obsessively on one issue (safety of GMOs), be wrong about it, and then make a huge effort just to try to bring down one state school researcher.
Anyway, there's no comparison to the situation with BPS researchers. It's too bad that people fall for this. Reverse the situation and it starts to look similar. Unfortunately people seem get so high from signaling their anti-anti-science stance that they lose all critical thinking and simply defer to anything that can claim institutional authority.
Now back to scheduled programming.