dating site hacked

Discussion in 'In the News' started by goodlove, May 23, 2015.

  1. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

    And it should be that way

     
  2. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

  3. Bug

    Bug Well-Known Member

    LMFAO!!!! Highlighted parts are my favourite :D

    The Ashley Madison hack has revealed a lot of interesting things about the men who used the extramarital-dating site, including which cities, states, and universities they're from.
    But what about the women?

    It turns out, there may not have been very many women. As in, almost none.

    Gizmodo editor-in-chief Annalee Newitz analyzed the data from the site's user database and found a lot of suspicious stuff suggesting that nearly all the female accounts were fake, maintained by the company's employees.

    First, the official numbers. The info that the hackers published contained about 31 million accounts apparently belonging to men, and about 5 million apparently belonging to women.

    But when Newitz dug deeper, she found a bunch of test accounts that ended with ashleymadison.com, suggesting that they were created internally (90% of them were for women), as well as 350 female accounts for people with the same and very unusual last name.

    Then she found three really damning pieces of data:

    Only 1,492 of the women in the database had ever opened their inbox to check their messages on the site. That's compared with more than 20 million men.
    Only 2,409 of the women had ever used the site's chat function, versus more than 11 million men.
    Only 9,700 of the women had ever responded to a message from another person on the site, versus almost 6 million men. (This number was greater than the number of women who checked messages because it's possible to answer messages in bulk when you first visit the site, without ever opening your inbox.)
    It's possible that most of the women signed up but never did anything.

    Either way, Newitz writes, Ashley Madison is a site where tens of millions of men write mail, chat, and spend money for women who aren't there."

    The site's parent company, Avid Life Media, did not immediately return a request for comment.


    Not only has all your information been leaked and probably caused you some serious agro life wise.
    But you were paying for a service that was pretty much never gonna work in the way it was sold to you as.
    If that is not grounds for a 100% refund I don't know what is, it's the principal of the thing that would annoy me and I'd be hankering for my money back if I was a guy.
     
  4. medullaslashin

    medullaslashin Well-Known Member

    Sport fuckin' is rapidly becoming the norm... :mrgreen:

    I'm amused at some of the comments from the company's reps, like "hacking? Exposing people? That's just wrong!" ... when their whole business model is about dishonesty and "anything goes."

    They took a hit? Good for them. And good for the people who find themselves busted.
     
  5. andreboba

    andreboba Well-Known Member


    LOLOL.

    It's what those guys deserve, honestly.

    I wonder how many guys actually hooked up off AshleyMadison???

    Married women cheat too, but I guess it's more male fantasy that millions of unsatisfied, beautiful wives would sign up for something like that on the internet.

    If a woman wants to cheat it really doesn't take all that much effort IMO.
    IMO most women have at least a couple of male friends who are ready to get intimate if she gives them the go sign.
     
  6. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

    Im pretty sure women cheat just as much as men.

     
  7. RaiderLL

    RaiderLL Well-Known Member

    True. Women just aren't as likely to be naive enough to think hot men are waiting on some website to fulfill their every wish lol. Dudes are too quick to fall for a picture on the Internet. That company played them like the fools they are lol.
     
  8. The Dark King

    The Dark King Well-Known Member

    I think it's that more men crave the convenience and the privacy. I don't think anyone was on there for a dream fuck. I think the motivation was more about new pussy you didn't have to go to a bar to find
     
  9. Bliss

    Bliss Well-Known Member

    BINGO.
    The owners said they have (allegedly) received an influx of 80, 000 women signing up after the expose.
    Last night, Jimmy Fallon joked that it's just the cheating husband's wives joining to get a date with their husbands. Lol.
     
  10. Gorath

    Gorath Well-Known Member

    I remember watching a daytime talk show and the founder of Ashley Madison was on. The host grilled the guy about the moral ramifications of infidelity. He simply said that all he is doing was to provide a service that allows men.and women an opportunity to "enjoy their sex lives" with another person. He stated that it was safe and it was discrete. Yeah, right. Their tagline in their own tv commercial was "Life is short. Have an affair." I didn't trust it from the beginning. I happen to be a member of Adult Friend Finder. I know that Penthouse magazine owns the site. I just haven't pat to use it fully(you can't even look at any of the profiles).
     
  11. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

    Well the thing is that people are who gave their cc or debit cards with thier name on it set themselves up.

    Everyone has seen companies all over gwt gacked.
     
  12. goodlove

    goodlove New Member

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