Tesla owners alarmed by Dogequest website listing personal information
Tesla owners confirmed on Wednesday that an online map decorated with an image of a Molotov cocktail includes accurate personal information about them, such as residential addresses, raising fears that activists opposed to billionaire Tesla CEO Elon Musk could target them for vandalism.Â
The online map went live Monday, displaying the names, addresses and contact information of some Tesla owners and dealerships and members of the Trump administration in an attempt to whip up further backlash against Musk for his role in the Trump administration.Â
Musk condemned the website, writing Tuesday on X: âEncouraging destruction of Teslas throughout the country is extreme domestic terrorism!!âÂ
The website, which was intermittently inaccessible Wednesday, encourages visitors to commit vandalism, including by using a spray can to âunleash your artistic flairâ on a nearby Tesla and through other âcreative expressions of protest.â And in a reference to the escalating vandalism of Tesla vehicles and facilities in recent weeks, the cursor on the desktop version of the map is an image of a Molotov cocktail.Â
NBC News spoke to six Tesla owners or their representatives who confirmed that at least some information on the website was accurate, though other owners said that in some cases phone numbers or addresses were out of date.Â
On Tuesday, someone armed with a gun and Molotov cocktails attacked a Tesla service center in Las Vegas, spray-painting âresist,â firing several shots and torching multiple cars, authorities said. Itâs not clear whether the map was tied to the incident.
The website is causing concern among some Tesla owners who fear they or their vehicles could be attacked.Â
âHaving our personal addresses out there is not something that I think is cool,â said a San Diego Tesla owner named Scott. His family owns two Teslas, and he asked that his name be withheld to prevent harassment. He said they bought the vehicles years ago, before Muskâs alliance with President Donald Trump, and that it didnât make financial sense to sell them now.Â
âI think thereâs much more effective ways to protest than attacking individualsâ property,â he said.Â
Some other Tesla owners said they werenât particularly concerned about the site. One said the information listed about them was out of date, and another said personal information had become ubiquitous online anyway.Â
The site pushes Tesla owners to join the trend of people selling their vehicles so they can disassociate from Musk. The site says it will take down ownersâ personal information if they provide âproof that youâve sold your Tesla.âÂ
Tesla didnât immediately respond to a request for comment Wednesday.In a post on X, it advised owners to turn on âsentry mode,â which allows owners to see and record live video from their vehiclesâ cameras.Â
The site, called âDogequest,â refers to Muskâs work for Trump as head of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE). Musk has used the position to try to slash federal spending and reorganize whole federal agencies, leading to repeated clashes not only in the federal courts and with Congress but also within the Trump Cabinet. On Tuesday, a federal judge ruled that Muskâs shutdown of the U.S. Agency for International Development âlikely violated the United States Constitution in multiple ways,â a decision that Musk attacked as wrong.Â
The map included only a small fraction of all Tesla owners, listing only a handful in some cities where Teslas are relatively common, such as San Francisco.Â
Itâs not clear who is behind the online map or where they obtained the data they posted. The creators didnât respond to an email sent to an address listed on the website requesting further information or comment.Â
Domain registration records for the website indicated it was registered via an anonymous domain hosting platform called Njalla Okta LLC.Â
The map was released following a rise in vandalism against Tesla. Aside from the Las Vegas incident, other reported attacks have involved charging stations in the Boston area and more Molotov cocktails thrown at a dealership in Colorado. On Monday, the San Diego County Sheriffâs Office reported that swastikas were painted on multiple Teslas at a dealership.Â
Attorney General Pam Bondi has said the attacks on Tesla property are ânothing short of domestic terrorismâ and pledged federal investigations.Â
The Justice Department and the FBI didnât immediately respond to requests for comment about the map.Â
Source link