Ashley Madison boss steps down

New information about AshleyMadison.com is coming out everyday, but the biggest shocker about the cheating site may have just been revealed. Turns out, a vast majority of the of the women on that site are either fake or inactive.

THE chief executive of dating-for-adulterers website Ashley Madison has stepped down after hackers leaked its membership list online.

Parent company Avid Life Media, which operates the infidelity network, said on Friday that it and CEO Noel Biderman were in “mutual agreement” about the split.

“This change is in the best interest of the company and allows us to continue to provide support to our members and dedicated employees,” Avid Life Media said.

Noel Biderman allegedly used his own website to have multiple affairs, including a lengthy one with a Toronto-area escort, it was reported.

The firm, meanwhile, is “adjusting to the attack on our business and members’ privacy by criminals,” the company added, vowing uninterrupted member access to its website.

Other senior managers will step in to fill the gap left by Mr Biderman’s departure until a new boss is appointed, the firm said. A hacker group calling itself the “Impact Team” last week released emails and user account information of members stolen from the company’s servers, as well as corporate emails and sensitive computer source code.

The gang claimed it wanted to bring attention to the fact that Ashley Madison was charging clients a fee to delete their personal information but was in fact archiving it.

Canadian police have said two possible suicides, including one by a Texas police officer, may be linked to the leak of the website’s 32 million members’ personal data.

The breach has also stirred concern the potential for blackmail. Privacy watchdogs in Canada and Australia are jointly investigating the leak.

Police in Toronto, where Avid Life Media is based, along with the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the Ontario Provincial Police, US Homeland Security, the Pentagon and the American FBI are also probing the most talked-about hack of the year.

Although there has been no measurable uptick in business for divorce lawyers, internet reputation and public relations consultants said their phones have been ringing off the hook from cheaters in crisis seeking help.

An analysis of the leaked data by news site Gizmodo showed little if any activity from the purported 5.5 million female members of Ashley Madison, who were online with an estimated 31 million male subscribers.

The data, which was released on the “dark web” and is not easily accessible to most internet users, suggests the vast majority of profiles of women on Ashley Madison were fake, or created by automated “bots.” Gizmodo traced many of the IP addresses for females back to Ashley Madison itself.

Avid Life Media has declined to comment on the report.

But if true, the data would suggest the website facilitated very few extramarital affairs.

Avid Life Media is offering a $US375,000 ($523,340) reward for information leading to the arrest of the hackers.

Source:: news.com.au

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