STFU NEWS: The AshleyMadison Data Dump

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  • L-Pink
    working on my tan
    • Mar 2005
    • 39151

    #101
    Originally posted by AdultKing
    Avid Life Media sold a service to wipe people's details from Ashley Madison for a fee, which clearly did not happen, so where is the complicity of Avid Life in all of this ?

    Noel Biderman desperately wants to shift the focus to the hackers, because his own culpability has to be downplayed if he is to survive this without jail time.




    Two people may have committed suicide after Ashley Madison hack: police | SBS News

    And there is the heart of the lawsuit, how could information I paid to be completely deleted hacked?


    .

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    • AdultKing
      Raise Your Weapon
      • Jun 2003
      • 15601

      #102
      Originally posted by L-Pink
      And there is the heart of the lawsuit, how could information I paid to be completely deleted hacked?


      .
      Worse still is that Ashley Madison seemed to do some hacking of their own.

      Hacked online cheating service AshleyMadison.com is portraying itself as a victim of malicious cybercriminals, but leaked emails from the company?s CEO suggests that AshleyMadison?s top leadership hacked into a competing dating service in 2012.
      http://krebsonsecurity.com/2015/08/l...d-competitors/

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      • Barry-xlovecam
        It's 42
        • Jun 2010
        • 18083

        #103
        Originally posted by shiraz9944
        I didnt' mean the individual users financial stuff I meant company stuff, and I just read in a new article and they dumped all their financials now, how much he makes, his wife, all their ID's, ,passports, account numbers, cell phone numbers, daily revenue, affiliate info my god everything. 300k daily revenue. Wow the got just about everything.

        OK. That needed clarification. Personally I could care less the CEO's personal info was revealed. That has no affect on my business -- not really of passing interest

        What I am concerned of, and this might affect our business: Is consumer financial data or credit card account information, e.g.; account numbers, CVV number / Card Security Codes, address of banking data being compromised. I am concerned about our customers' willingness to make purchases ... that matters to me this instant. Also, the government regulations covering breaches of this nature are very costly, here in the USA anyway. As for the emails used: I guess if they didn't use a Gmail or Yahoo email account set up anonymously to 'cheat' on their wife -- oh well ...

        It goes without mention that this is bad for customer confidence and adult website credibility and security. That will not be easy to address openly with customers, nor probably a wise thing to do.

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        • Relentless
          www.EngineFood.com
          • Aug 2006
          • 5697

          #104
          As Rick correctly pointed out early in this thread, distrust of adult sites sends people to free porn. Why enter your card number in a pay site when you can keep yourself anonymous on a tube site instead. However that doesn't hold as true for dating. Even free dating sites require your information to be added and by their nature that includes contact info and personal details.

          Unless someone offers encrypted dating and the public is willing to play cat and mouse with each potential mate to avoid putting any real details online - the public has a choice to either use dating sites or not... Because a site without their card number is just as revealing as one that has it if it gets hacked. People aren't freaking out that their card may be compromised, they are rightly worried their intimate details might be available to the public. Billing security actually has very little to do with this equation.


          Website Secure | Engine Food
          ICQ# 266-942-896

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          • AmeliaG
            Too lazy to set a custom title
            • Jan 2003
            • 10664

            #105
            Originally posted by Relentless
            EliteWebmaster,

            Do you think charging a data removal fee contributed to the hacker's motives, or do you think AshleyMadison would have been a target anyway without removal fees?

            It couldn't have helped. If the extortionist hackers were after AM because they felt they were on a mission against bad guys, every bad guy action made AM more likely to be a target.
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