Since the arbitration committee won't get back to me, I thought I might help the doxing board out.
1. In the United States, and likely elsewhere, all real estate transactions are stored in the county registrar of deeds. So the owner is recorded in their official books, and the property they purchase/sold/whater is either identified by either a specific address, or a lot number on a tax map. If the latter, tax maps can be pulled up through the municipal tax assessors office. Many times these records are free online. A word of caution, it is possible there are multiple people of the same name living in the same municipality.
2. If a person has ever been dragged to court as a party, it is [likely] recorded on a court docket. Again these dockets are online, sometimes access to the dockets and the full pleadings are free, and sometimes the online docketing system is state wide or county wide. Again, A word of caution, it is possible there are multiple people of the same name, even the same approximate age, living in the same municipality.
3. There are free genealogy services online, which allows users to inspect copies of the the original documents, for free. Among these are
https://www.familysearch.org/en/ . A word of caution, it is usually common for people new at genealogical research to make mistakes, as they are easy to make. Don't trust sites like geni or wikitree; They might provide guidance, but you have to establish your own proofs by original documentation on sites like family search [or ancestry-the latter of which isn't free].
4. Quite a few of the previously doxxed wikipedias have made political donations. Many countries and states publish who donates what. In the US,
https://www.opensecrets.org/ is a useful tool that published federal and state donations. The FEC's webpage, for federal elections, is
https://www.fec.gov/data/receipts/indiv ... ributions/ . For Canada,
https://www.elections.ca/wpapps/WPF/EN/ ... turntype=1 . The US publishes more details such as the donator's profession, whereas in canada it is still easy to get people mixed up.
4 example
https://www.fec.gov/data/receipts/indiv ... iam+lesuer . In the case of previously doxxed, evergreenfir, he is a berniebro, but his potential grandfather donated to republicans. One is a gender studies loser propagandist, the other...
https://honorsandawards.iu.edu/awards/honoree/2463.html made something of himself.
5. For those who have your own webservers, you might be able to trick an admin to loading a specific image on their computer that generally the rest of the public will not known about. Some images can be loaded by accessing say a cgi or php script that ultimately produces the image and mime type to their client, but also scripted to save the access information into a special log file. Once you have their ip address, use an online geolocator tool. Unless they are using a proxy/vpn, or tor, this should find their general location. Sometimes the old traceroute an reveal a lot of information too, including a street name-but don't count on it.
6. Many people, and admins are no exception, have a common username used all over the place. If it is worth your time, see what their interest are, then use social engineering and try to befriend them in online conversation and see if they start to reveal personal information.
6a. use a google site search, to see what all they are saying on a site. A site search will include in the search bar something like [site:cnn.com], only without the brackets.
7. Every once in a while, wikipedia host social events that no one really cares about-except for admins and employees. With these events there is usually some type of hashtag associated with it. Some events might be specific to a certain time by country, so it might be possible to refine a search by county to a certain start and end date.
7a. If in the United states, film all you can about the attendees to these events from the public sidewalks or other non-restricted public land. film license plates, film name badges, etc, etc. If you can infiltrate these groups by a ticket, and pretend to be one of them, even better. hmm, are these events on youtube? I can think of some other things by creating public wifi, but won't finish this thought.
8. Cellphone Geolocation data is sold, as we have learned through the movie 2000 miles. I have no idea of the cost. It might be possible for people with advanced database skills with the data to collect unique cellphone ids at and during their wiki events by constructing a geofence. Then also using geolocation data for each positive, maybe a week before or a week after, see where else these ids are showing up. It might reveal their homes [strike]or workplaces[/strike].
9. I am not an attorney and I am not giving legal advice, and this one is bound to be expensive. But It might be possible to sue a particular admin in their individual capacity in a jon doe [defendant] lawsuit, for acts done in bad faith. Relief might be through tort as defined by statutes, or through injunction. I am not sure how one would establish jurisdiction, if the jon doe doesn't pass the international shoe test, or the state the suit is filed in doesn't otherwise have sufficient long arm statutes. questions for $lawyers$. If you can get the admin to visit your special image mentioned in #5, it might be possible to send the subpoena right to their internet host provider and thus never put wikipedia on notice.
10. Some admins try to edit pages in their own area. Go to google maps, and keep adding a point on the map that they edit. Alternatively, record the longitude and latitude and try to get the averages. It will not be an exact,and it could be towns off, and the mean could be skewed based upon economic development or other factors. hmm, did they make political donations where we might be able to use example #4 in reverse to get a list of potential wiki admins in the area?
11. If they upload images anywhere, although it is likely wikimedia strips the meta data, by cell phone, try to see if you can access the metadata. Cellphones are known to record the users longitude and latitude of where the picture was taken. Even if wikimedia scraps this data, if they use the username in other places on the web and make uploads in these other sites, then the meta data might be retained.
12. It is unlikely wikipedia is the only place they are uploading images. Whether it is an image they uploaded, or even an image on their user page, do a reverse image search, such as tineye.com . Sure plenty of other places and people are likely using the image too, but it is possible the image could be on the admins own facebook, instagram, personal website [check whois if they have one], etc, etc.
13. Some admins have edits in other language version of wikipedia. Try to see if they are more open in their native tongue, especially those who just have scripts to correct dead links or do petty nbsp changes on the english site.
So for the wikipedia Admins who really really really hate what I done, go blame "tobefree" for his baseless block, and for 331dot, jpgordon, and yamla for their sloppiness. And their failure to articulate how I allegedly violated the rules.
Just be glad I don't feel like getting litigious for go full otaku mode in outing all of you that i can.