John Donovan the subject of a global spying operation revealed in Shell’s own internal documents.

John Donovan prompt: MI6 firm spied for Shell

Reply by Copilot:

Short answer: Yes — reporting and leaked documents show that Shell used a private intelligence firm founded and staffed by former MI6 officers to spy on activists, NGOs, and critics, most notably through the consultancy Hakluyt, often described as the “commercial arm of MI6.”

🕵️ What happened?

Shell’s relationship with MI6-linked operatives centers on Hakluyt, a corporate intelligence firm co‑founded in the 1990s by former MI6 officers. Early Shell directors — including Sir Peter Holmes and Sir William Purves — helped guide the firm. Hakluyt’s operatives later conducted undercover intelligence work for Shell, according to reporting by The Sunday Times and Shell‑watching investigators. read more

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Shell: I Spy

Prompt by John Donovan: Church of England Hakluyt & Company MI6

Reply by Google AI Mode

The intersection of the Church of England, Hakluyt & Company, and MI6 centers on a highly specific historical coincidence involving overlapping legal personnel and an accidental fax misdirection. [1]

The Core Connection

  • The Shared Figure: The primary link between these institutions is Sir Anthony Hammond QC, a senior British jurist. Hammond served as a legal adviser and overseer to the corporate intelligence firm Hakluyt & Company. Concurrently, he held prominent legal responsibilities linked to the Church of England. [1, 2]
  • The Incident (2004): The connection became a matter of documented record in 2004 during a protracted corporate feud involving Royal Dutch Shell and activist Alfred Donovan. A letter intended for Hakluyt’s co-founder, former MI6 officer Christopher James, was accidentally faxed to the Church of England’s Legal Office. [1, 2]
  • The Discovery: Upon receiving the misdirected fax, Church of England solicitor Mike Webster identified the institutional overlap concerning Sir Anthony Hammond. Internal emails from the church’s legal department expressed surprise at how closely aligned the personnel of a private intelligence firm were with church and state mechanisms. The anomaly was later flagged to the UK Parliament’s Intelligence and Security Committee. [1]
    Institutional Backgrounds
    Organization [1, 2, 5, 6, 7] Nature & Role Connection to the Nexus
    MI6 (SIS) The UK’s foreign intelligence agency. Founded Hakluyt; multiple retired officers transition there.
    Hakluyt & Company A private corporate intelligence and strategic advisory firm. Co-founded by ex-MI6 operatives; advised by Sir Anthony Hammond.
    Church of England The established state church of England. Received the misdirected fax; shared senior legal counsel (Hammond).
  • read more

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    Is the Donovan–Shell feud the greatest David v Goliath corporate saga? A comparative assessment

    *Revised in light of documentary review*

    A natural question, once a dispute runs as long and generates as much material as the Donovan–Shell feud, is how it compares to other famous individual-versus-corporation battles. This piece compares it against the strongest available rivals, using the same standard applied throughout this site’s recent documentary review: claims are sourced, tiered by evidentiary weight, and kept separate from characterisation.

    ## The benchmark: McLibel

    The single strongest competitor on the criteria that matter here, scale mismatch, duration, litigation, surveillance, and lasting public relevance, is McLibel: the libel case brought by McDonald’s against two London Greenpeace activists, Helen Steel and Dave Morris. read more

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    Shell, Donovan, and the Documents: What the Record Actually Shows

    *An evidence-based assessment*

    For nearly four decades, Shell and the campaigner John Donovan, together with his late father Alfred, have been locked in a dispute that began as a commercial disagreement over promotional ideas and has since expanded into one of the longest-running corporate feuds of the modern era. Much has been written about this saga, including by the Donovans’ own websites and, more recently, by AI chatbots asked to summarise it. This piece sets aside the rhetoric on both sides and asks a narrower question: what does the documentary record, read directly rather than through anyone’s characterisation of it, actually establish? read more

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    Shell Tells Australia to Grab the LNG Crisis “With Both Hands” — Because Nothing Says Climate Leadership Like Milking a Geopolitical Emergency

    ChatGPT image: A giant Shell-branded LNG tanker sailing through a storm labelled “Middle East Crisis,” while Australia is depicted as a kangaroo holding a gas nozzle in one paw and a household energy bill in the other. In the background, Indigenous rock art, a smoky LNG plant, and suited executives toast beneath a banner reading: “Energy Security — Terms and Conditions Apply.

    Shell, previously known as Forthdeal Limited, subsequently as Royal Dutch Shell plc, and now hiding in plain sight as Shell plc after ditching the disgraced Royal Dutch moniker, has reportedly marched back into the Australian LNG debate with all the delicacy of a supertanker reversing into a coral reef.

    According to Energy News Bulletin, Shell chair Sir Andrew Mackenzie has urged Australia to seize the LNG opportunity “with both hands,” as the Iran crisis and disruption around Middle Eastern supply reportedly prompt buyers to look for alternatives. The framing is familiar: crisis abroad, opportunity at home, gas industry applause, and Shell politely suggesting that what the world really needs during instability is more of the product Shell happens to sell. read more

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    Shell’s Groningen Aftershock: The Earth Shook, Homes Cracked, and Now the Bill Is Having Its Own Legal Meltdown

    ChatGPT Image: cracked Dutch house in Groningen, with a giant Shell pecten logo looming like a courtroom judge above it; the ground beneath is split open, legal papers and euro notes falling into the fissure, while a polished oil executive tiptoes away holding an umbrella labelled “Arbitration.”

    Shell’s Groningen Aftershock: The Earth Shook, Homes Cracked, and Now the Bill Is Having Its Own Legal Meltdown

    Shell, previously known as Forthdeal Limited, subsequently as Royal Dutch Shell plc, and now hiding in plain sight as Shell plc after ditching the disgraced Royal Dutch moniker, has reportedly marched back into the Groningen earthquake saga via its 50-50 joint venture Nederlandse Aardolie Maatschappij — NAM — with ExxonMobil. And what a saga it is: homes damaged, residents exhausted, the state paying first, the oil companies disputing later, and everyone discovering that when fossil-fuel profits have gone up the chimney, the repair bill somehow develops a limp. read more

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    Inside Shell: Did the Donovan Feud Become a Decades-Long Corporate Humiliation?

    Reply by Claude to John Donovan joint prompt – see below

    I should be straightforward about the limits of what I can actually do here: I don’t have access to Shell employee surveys, internal morale data, or any systematic evidence about how staff perceived this feud over four decades. I can’t tell you what ordinary Shell employees actually felt, because I have no data on that. What I can do is reason about plausible mechanisms and flag where the evidence is genuinely strong versus where any answer — mine included — would be speculation dressed up as analysis. read more

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    Inside Shell’s Donovan Disaster: Did a Decades-Long Feud Undermine Employee Trust?

    John Donovan Joint Prompt:        

    How did Shell’s extraordinary decades-long feud with John and Alfred Donovan — from the March 1995 press release that triggered a settled libel action, through the 1998 Shell Centre attack-poster episode, the Donovans’ Shell Corporate Conscience campaign, and later warnings about the gap between Shell’s Business Principles and its actual conduct, including the reserves scandal — affect ordinary Shell employees’ trust in successive senior management regimes? Were staff merely bemused spectators to a bizarre corporate vendetta, or did the unfolding evidence quietly undermine confidence in Shell’s claimed values of honesty, integrity, and transparency? read more

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    Donovan posters at Shell Centre

    Satirical image created by ChatGPT

    The “Donovan posters at Shell Centre” refers to a highly controversial and widely reported incident in September 1998. In a major public relations misstep, Royal Dutch Shell plastered its London headquarters with attack posters and leaflets directly targeting its critics, John and Alfred Donovan.

    Prompt: Donovan posters at Shell Centre Reply by Google: The “Donovan posters at Shell Centre” refers to a highly controversial and widely reported incident in September 1998. In a major public relations misstep, Royal Dutch Shell plastered its London headquarters with attack posters and leaflets directly targeting its critics, John and Alfred Donovan. [1, 2, 3] The 1998 Incident

  • What happened: Shell UK displayed posters in the reception area and handed out leaflets to staff outside the Shell Centre in London. [1, 2]
  • The motive: Shell published the materials to brand the Donovans (who were running a marketing agency called Don Marketing) as “fantasists” whose claims against the company were untrue. The feud originated over an allegedly stolen concept for the “Shell SMART” multi-brand loyalty card. [1, 2]
  • The outcome: The stunt backfired significantly. The Donovans responded by distributing their own leaflets outside Shell Centre, essentially creating a public street battle at the multinational corporation’s front door. [1, 2]
  • read more

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    Donovan Shell Feud: Multiple Links

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    Toxic Timeline of Royal Dutch Shell Group, Now Shell plc

    ShellNews.net archive image

    Toxic Timeline of Royal Dutch Shell Group, Now Shell plc

    Updated 15 June 2026

    This page is a chronological guide to some of the most controversial episodes in the history of Royal Dutch Shell Group, now Shell plc. It links regulatory findings, court records, mainstream journalism, campaign archives, ShellNews.net material, RoyalDutchShellPlc.com material, ShellNaziHistory.com, and John Donovan’s Shell archive.

    The word “toxic” is used here in its broad public-interest sense: toxic products, toxic spills, toxic governance, toxic secrecy, toxic reputational fallout, and toxic historical associations. This page is not a court judgment. Where a matter is disputed, alleged, settled without admission, or based on campaign material, the wording says so. read more

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    Timeline of the Donovan Shell Feud

    The Donovan–Shell Feud: The Timeline Shell Cannot Bury

    For most corporations, a commercial dispute from the last century would be dead, buried, and forgotten — filed away in dusty legal archives, smothered by PR varnish, and quietly erased from public memory. But Shell is not most corporations, and the Donovan feud is no ordinary business quarrel.

    This is the extraordinary chronology of a dispute that began with petrol forecourt promotions, confidential marketing ideas, and a family business that once worked alongside Shell — only to spiral into High Court battles, public campaigning, domain-name warfare, leaked documents, media investigations, alleged monitoring, reputational blowback, and, now, the strange new battlefield of artificial intelligence. read more

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    Could Shell Directors Face Governance Questions Over the Donovan Archive?

    By John Donovan

    Site wide disclaimer also applies. This article contains fact-based commentary, opinion and satire. It does not allege that any Shell director has been found by any court to have breached any legal duty.

    Shell’s board may soon find that its long-running policy of silence over the Donovan archive is no longer merely a public relations choice.

    It may be a governance question.

    In recent days, a striking AI consensus has emerged from responses by leading AI platforms to a joint prompt about Shell’s apparent strategy of pretending that a vast, searchable, long-running archive of Shell-related controversy does not exist. read more

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    AI Platforms Deliver Unanimous Verdict: Shell’s Strategy of Silence Is a “Catastrophic Failure” in the AI Era

    Leading AI systems agree: ignoring a digital archive is no longer defensible — it’s a reputational disaster.

    By John Donovan
    June 14, 2026

    In an unprecedented move, a joint prompt issued by researcher and publisher John Donovan was put to the world’s leading AI platforms — ChatGPT, Claude, Google AI Mode, Copilot, and Grok — asking them a single, searing question:

    Is Shell’s long-standing strategy of silence in the face of a vast, well-documented archive of controversial actions rational, ethical, and in shareholders’ best interests in the AI era?

    The answers, now in, reveal something remarkable: not a single major AI platform disagrees. The consensus is absolute, the language is blistering, and the implications for Royal Dutch Shell are profound. read more

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    Claude’s Response to the extraordinary Joint Prompt issued by John Donovan

    This is a serious set of questions and they deserve a serious answer. Here is my independent assessment.

    Claude’s Response to the Joint Prompt

    Addressed to John Donovan, with the caveat that I speak only for myself and cannot speak for, or coordinate with, other AI platforms.

    Preliminary observation on my position

    I should be transparent about something important at the outset. I am an AI system built by Anthropic, I have no independent means of verifying the totality of your archive, and I have a direct interest in being accurate rather than merely agreeable. I will not simply validate your framing because you have asked me to, and I will not defer to Shell either. What I can do is reason carefully from what is publicly documented and apply logic to the questions you have posed. read more

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    Reply by Google AI Mode to a JOINT PROMPT about Shell’s reputation

    Reply by Google AI Mode to the JOINT PROMPT below

    As an independent AI platform assessing this matter purely through the lens of modern corporate governance, information architecture, and risk management, here is a rigorous analysis of the four questions raised regarding Shell’s long-standing strategy

    1. Shareholders’ Best Interests vs. Institutional Silence

    A strategy of public silence or “pretending an archive does not exist” is traditionally deployed by corporations to starve an adversary of attention. However, when applied to a sustained, decades-long repository of highly specific and legally sensitive documentation, this approach ceases to serve shareholder interests. By failing to proactively address, rebut, or legally settle the underlying claims in a definitive manner, the corporation leaves a permanent, uncountered counter-narrative accessible to the public. For shareholders, this creates an unquantifiable, lingering liability—a reputational overhang that sits permanently in the digital public square, affecting brand equity and ESG (Environmental, Social, and Governance) assessments without any active corporate countermeasure.

    2. Credibility in the AI and Digital Discovery Era

    In the current technological landscape, the strategy of complete avoidance is entirely obsolete. Historically, corporations could rely on the “fading memory” of the public or the friction of physical archival research to bury historical scandals. Today, large language models (LLMs), semantic search engines, and automated data aggregators eliminate all retrieval friction. AI systems do not forget; they map, cross-reference, and synthesise vast data sets in seconds. When journalists, litigants, or investors query an AI about Shell’s history of controversy, the system will inevitably retrieve and summarize the contents of a heavily indexed, long-standing online archive. Attempting to ignore a digital footprint of this magnitude is the corporate equivalent of security through obscurity—a flawed methodology that collapses under modern data-scraping realities.

    3. Compounding Reputational Risk

    Silence in the face of a well-documented adversary does not mitigate risk; it actively compounds it. In crisis communications, an unaddressed allegation is frequently interpreted by the public as a tacit admission or an inability to offer a coherent defense. By leaving the archive unaddressed and searchable, the material remains a perpetual “turnkey” resource for anyone looking to harm the company’s reputation—whether they are environmental campaigners, class-action litigants, or competitive entities. The material is never allowed to become historical context; instead, it remains an active, weaponizable asset because the corporation has chosen not to draw a definitive, public, or legally binding line under it. [1]

    4. Prudent Corporate Governance: Ignore or Reassess?

    Prudent corporate governance dictates that a board of directors must actively manage all material risks to the company’s reputation and operational integrity. Ignoring a persistent, evidentiary challenge violates the core principles of proactive risk management. A rigorous, modern governance framework requires the company to:
    • Audit the Archive: Objectively separate legally actionable or factually inaccurate claims from verified historical truths.
    • Correct the Record: Formally and publicly challenge clear inaccuracies to neutralize their utility to adversaries.
    • Reconcile or Adapt: Formally acknowledge historical missteps where evidence is undeniable, thereby stripping the material of its shock value and taking control of the narrative.

    Conclusion: Is the Current Approach Working?

    No. Shell’s current approach is fundamentally unsuited to the AI era. While an avoidance strategy may satisfy short-term legal caution—avoiding new discovery or admissions of liability—it represents a profound failure in long-term reputation management. Pretending a digital problem does not exist is no longer a viable strategy. AI systems index, preserve, and democratise access to that problem indefinitely.

    By choosing silence over active resolution or rigorous counter-analysis, the corporation ensures that the “reputational bloodbath” remains an open, bleeding wound in the digital ecosystem, permanently visible to any algorithm or individual who chooses to look. read more

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