Ashley Madison To Pay $1.6M Settlement Related To Data Breach (pcworld.com) 45
The company behind Ashley Madison, the adultery enabling website, has agreed to pay a $1.6 million settlement related to a major data breach last year that exposed account details of 36 million users. From a PCWorld report: Ashley Madison's operator, Toronto-based Ruby, is making the settlement for failing to protect the account information and for creating fake user profiles to lure in prospective customers, the U.S. Federal Trade Commission said on Wednesday. In July 2015, a hacking group called Impact Team managed to steal the account details and then post them online a month later -- potentially damaging the reputation of the customers using the adultery website. The FTC alleges the Ashley Madison site suffered from lax security, allowing hackers to break in several times between Nov. 2014 and June 2015. The service also retained personal information of users who had paid $19 to delete their data from the site, the FTC said.
How sad (Score:2, Insightful)
Let's put aside the morality question around extramarital affairs. The fact is that any woman who would need a site like this to find a hook up would have to be very undesirable, and more likely these women don't exist in the first place. Any woman can find a guy to hook up with without relaxing standards too much.
Men who use this site have to be incredibly stupid and/or desperate. Crap. I'm not that desirable of a guy myself outside of my six figure income and I've been come onto more than once by women wh
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That's not how that site works, you would have met someone else's wife.
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you would have met someone else's wife
Or a pro. But most probably a chatbot.
It's possible that someone did meet his future wife by posing as a married man. Quite a few women (both married and single) troll for hookups among these guys. Perhaps they figure if he's married once, he'll do it again. Or just that he's good blackmail material. Back in my single days, wearing a wedding ring improved my success rate. But on AM; not going there myself.
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Or a pro. But most probably a chatbot.
AM has publicly admitted that most of the women on the site are fake. The fine print in their TOS says they can engage their users with artificial profiles for "entertainment purposes". Anyone wasting their time on AM is a fool, which is further demonstrated by the fact that many of them were stupid enough to use their real names and contact info.
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What's worse is people actually paid for the privilege of wasting their time on the site...
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I think we can definitively say that his right hand belongs to him and him alone.
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Don't forget my left. I swing both ways. Grindr AND Tinder.
Well, everyone's gotta have a hobby, though given your dedication to it, I'm surprised you haven't got friction burns on your "wife" by now.
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As far as the assertions themselves, everyone has their own motivation for what they do. I won't dispute that historically, mediums that cater toward interaction between the sexes tend to be dominated by male subscribers, but that doesn't mean that there aren't women that seek to use such a medium for their own pers
That's it? 1.6M? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:That's it? 1.6M? (Score:5, Insightful)
what a coincidence (Score:1)
4.5 cents per user.
that's exactly what the marriage is worth after the spouse finds out
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4.5 cents per user.
Have you deducted the lawyer fees/awards yet? :p
enabling adultery? (Score:5, Insightful)
What about fornication for unmarried people, can't they get service?
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Wouldn't such people use more conventional services like match.com, where they'd find other unmarried people that they can hook up w/?
Well... the married people on AM are presumably not on the whole picky as to whether they want to hook up with someone married or single. And it's a good indication that both people want something no strings attached.
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What if they use specs and performance of particular product offered as the main criteria?
A $1.6M settlement for 36M users (Score:3)
So the value of each user's information, including the fact that they're considering cheating on their spouse, is just 4.4 cents?
Re:A $1.6M settlement for 36M users (Score:5, Interesting)
I bet it doesn't even cover the $19 they were paid to pretend to delete the user's data. Once again, crime pays as long as you have that corporate veil to protect you from being personally responsible for your actions.
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The real damage here is the negative publicity they received, and the huge hit on the brand. I'm guessing most people will not trust them any longer with their personal data.
I vaguely remember seeing some story after the data breach that claimed they were still signing on new members.
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I'm guessing they don't read slashdot, and it probably wasn't on the 9 o'clock news.
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So the value of each user's information, including the fact that they're considering cheating on their spouse, is just 4.4 cents?
Maybe the value of their information is worth a lot per head, but the fact that they're considering cheating on their spouse is highly negative, and what pulls down their value to less than 5 cents
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Whatever, I just want to kill the damned spammers. (Score:1)
I never even used AM, but I got a shitload of attempted blackmail spam after they had their breach.
Case against them for fraud ... (Score:2)
If people paid $19 to have their data deleted, but they did not. This case should be answerable by the directors personally; however nothing will happen since few expect honesty or integrity in business these days -- unfortunately.
I keep expecting (Score:2)
Ashley Madison to be nominated to Trump's cabinet