Me read good!
In my attempt to understand the drama, it became evident that there is no "fall of Babylon 6" as the title described.
@Leodigarius if you can clarify, because I assumed the project had fallen apart and dissolved according to the title of the post.
What I did manage to understand from this drama is that the guy named Antarius who came up with the idea of B6 has never in his 15yrs of gaming heard of the word dox or doxxing. I guess he must be a tabletop gamer or something non-PC related, because it is impossible to be that removed from gaming culture, yet claim to be a part of it for 15yrs.
The actual doxxing was not actually a doxxing, but some genius doing a whois on a domain and then pasting the results which simply read "Registration Private", which is typically how 99.9% of sites display their info through a proxy service.
The argument that OP is making is that regardless of whether the information is publicly available or not, nobody should be attempting to use it to expose people who would probably not want their information publicly shared.
In that regard OP is correct, but the top minds at B6, who didn't even know what doxxing is, seem to disagree and feel that if its on the internet, its all fair game.
All that nonsense aside, the problem B6 will face if it does manage to exist into the launch of the game is that guys at the top will be facing a constant power struggle. They have some sort of democratic voting system that allows members and allies to control the direction and powers within the organization. This would typically be fine if everybody was acting in good faith, but as they will find out, majority of the members are all there to serve their own self interests and nothing else. Some of the time these interests may align, but more often than not there will be smaller more scrupulous orgs and individuals that just want to see the place burn down because it will be funny.
Did I get it right?