Family Values Activist Josh Duggar Had a Paid Ashley Madison Account http://gawker.com/family-values-activist-josh-duggar-had-a-paid-ashley-ma-1725132091 In 2013, conservative reality TV star Josh Duggar—of TLC’s 19 Kids and Counting fame—was named the executive director of the Family Research Council, a conservative lobbying group in D.C. which seeks “to champion marriage and family as the foundation of civilization, the seedbed of virtue, and the wellspring of society.” During that time, he also maintained a paid account on Ashley Madison, a web site created for the express purpose of cheating on your spouse. In May 2015, Duggar was forced to resign after In Touch Weekly reported that he had molested five young girls (four of whom were his own sisters) beginning in 2002. When the accusations became public, the family went into crisis mode, insisting that Josh had reformed and that the media covering the claims was intent on “exploiting women.” (More at above url)
The first interesting tidbit is that only 5% of the profiles are for females. And nearly all of the thousands of female profiles they have gone through are fakes. Then there is this... there are plenty of US military and government addresses in the leak. This is going to get good...
It's hard to believe that anyone in a sensitive position could be so stupid as to use his official e-mail address on a honey pot cheating site. Some of them probably signed up with no intention of an affair just out of morbid curiosity. Others may be security people checking up on their own.
"It's like Christmas in September for divorce lawyers" Evidence of infidelities spreads online in wake of hack http://www.wral.com/evidence-of-infidelities-spreads-online-in-wake-of-hack/14842536/ Husbands and wives across the world are being confronted with their partners' extramarital affairs after a catastrophic leak at adultery website Ashley Madison spewed electronic evidence of infidelity across the Internet. Online forums were buzzing Thursday with users claiming to have found evidence that their significant others were on the dating site. In Britain and Israel, parliamentarians have been put on the defensive after their email addresses were identified in the trove. And in Australia, one woman appeared to learn — live on air — that her husband's details were registered with the site. Family law experts are divided on the likely offline impact of the leak, but Los Angeles-based divorce lawyer Steve Mindel predicted an uptick in business for him and his colleagues. "We're all saying: 'It's going to be Christmas in September,'" Mindel said. "Pretty soon all of this stuff is going to surface and there's going to be a lot of filings for divorce directly as a result of this." Ashley Madison marketed itself as the premier venue for cheating spouses before data stolen by hackers started spreading across the Internet earlier this week. Late Thursday the same hackers released a second dump of information, whose content the Associated Press was not immediately able to determine. The material previously released, pertaining to the site's 35 million or so registered members, has already drawn widespread attention. Websites devoted to checking emails against the leaked data appeared to be experiencing heavy traffic. Forums such as Reddit — the user-powered news and discussion site — carried stories of anguished husbands and wives confronting their partners after finding their data among the massive dump of information. When the hosts of a morning show in Sydney, Australia, asked listeners to phone in if they wanted their spouse's details run through the database, a woman called saying she was suspicious because her husband had been acting strangely since the news of the leak broke. The hosts plugged his details into a website and said they found a match. "Are you serious? Are you freaking kidding me?" the woman asked, her voice shaking. "These websites are disgusting." She then hung up. The emotional punch of the Ashley Madison leak puts it in a separate category than the parade of recent data breaches, said Eduardo Ustaran, a data protection and privacy lawyer with Hogan Lovells in London. "Passwords can be changed and credit cards replaced," he said in an email. "But the Ashley Madison breach is different because it threatens to destroy lives and families." It could also threaten political careers. Journalists are combing through the data, looking for the names of celebrities, top officials or religious leaders. Their task has been complicated by the fact that many of the profiles were tied to fake or borrowed email addresses, which users did not necessarily have to validate. In Britain, Scottish lawmaker Michelle Thomson said an obsolete email address had been "harvested by hackers" and used to register an account with the site. A similar explanation was offered by Talab Abu Arar, a Bedouin Arab lawmaker in Israel whose parliamentary email address was found amid the dump. "Someone wanted simply to hurt my good name ... it is very annoying," he told Israel's Army Radio. Like many Bedouin Arabs, Abu Arar practices polygamy and has a wife and a common-law partner. With two partners, he said, why would he need a website? "I'm not lacking in women," he said with a chuckle.
Ashley Madison: It's where the women aren't... Ashley Madison needs way more women http://finance.yahoo.com/news/ashley-madison-needs-way-more-women-170735375.html#
Now Ashley Madison hackers reveal 'CEO's emails and source code' Meanwhile, IBM, Cisco and HP lead the IT pack on adultery website, it seems http://www.theregister.co.uk/2015/08/20/ashley_madison_email_dump/ And you ask - did their co-workers go look up the employees associated with email addresses. Heck yeah, they did. Most appear to be mid-management (Director level) staff.