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A notorious hacking scandal is apparently not stopping cheating website Ashley
I suppose you could say that this particular claim has a tone of defiance around it – Ashley Madison, the dating site that was exposed to a hack which saw millions of online cheaters’ personal information compromised not too long ago, proudly claims that it has more members joining its ranks. When the site was hacked, the members associated with the site were 39 million.
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A notorious hacking scandal is apparently not stopping website Ashley Madison from signing up new users.
But this week, the rolling counter of membership on the site’s homepage reflects the growth, stating that there are “more than 43,410,000 members”.
However, it is far from good news for Avid Life Media (who own AM).
In its last public statement, Avid Life said that reports of its imminent demise were “greatly exaggerated”, and cheaters continued to use the site more than ever – even though 32 million of its members’ identities were revealed in the massive data breach this summer. In August, roughly 70,529 women in the Ashley Madison database were bots created by the company to engage with their male subscribers.
“These numbers are the main reason that Ashley Madison is the number one service for people seeking discreet relationships”.
“Despite having our business and customers attacked, we are growing”.
Duggar admitted to paying for an Ashley Madison membership during his time as executive director of the Family Research Council, a conservative Christian group that lobbies against same-sex marriage and abortion. Ashley Madison, which faces several class-action lawsuits related to the breach, has tightened security on the site since the incident. The company denied that accusation and claimed that journalists were misreading exposed information.
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Ousted Avid Life CEO Noel Biderman is due to appear on Chelsea Handler’s upcoming Netflix documentary “Chelsea Does”, which is set to debut on January 23.