Ashley Madison is a website that promotes and caters for extra marital affairs because all its members are married. On their website, the company bills itself as the most famous name in infidelity and married dating.
A secretive group called the Impact team claim to have hacked into the online database and stolen the details and private messages. They warn that unless the site is shut down with immediate effect, they will expose its over 37 million cheating users worldwide (mostly from US and Canada) by publishing their names, addresses and explicit images online.
Ashley Madison — whose slogan urges ‘Life is short, have an affair’ —says that exposing the identity of its members would breach their right to privacy.
Others argue that the spouses of cheating partners have a right to know what their other half is doing.
For in the years since Ashley Madison launched in the UK in 2010, the site has been responsible for many ruined marriages and relationships.
Despite the extreme ramifications of joining the site, Ashley Madison is astonishingly easy to use. Free to join, new members are asked to provide a user name and blurred photograph.
Users then select what they’re looking for, ranging from ‘cyber affair/ erotic chat’ to ‘anything goes’. It’s open to single and attached users, though those who sign up are predominantly married.
A victim said, "This site destroyed my marriage of 20 years,’ writes Bob, 47, a British contributor to a hate-filled online forum for spouses of the site’s users.
‘My ex-wife was active with five men on a regular basis. The site was recommended to her by a previous lover, and the end result for me was divorce. It ruined my marriage and my self-esteem. It was awful. The worst part was that in her profile, she completely described me in who she was looking to meet.’
Worse than breaking up individual marriages, experts say Ashley Madison and its ilk are doing untold damage to the institution as a whole. Harry Benson, research director at the Marriage Foundation, says such sites are ‘thoroughly unpleasant and misleading’.
‘They actively encourage people to look for an affair by making that option available,’ he adds
Culled from Mirror
*Can't imagine how many homes and hearts this website have broken, yet this thing is legal? This world and the things they legalize. The couple who started this website ought to be jailed for being responsible for millions of broken homes by making adultery attractive and luring men into have extra marital affairs, but unfortunately they are the ones the world celebrate. It's really a sick world. God have mercy.
A secretive group called the Impact team claim to have hacked into the online database and stolen the details and private messages. They warn that unless the site is shut down with immediate effect, they will expose its over 37 million cheating users worldwide (mostly from US and Canada) by publishing their names, addresses and explicit images online.
Ashley Madison — whose slogan urges ‘Life is short, have an affair’ —says that exposing the identity of its members would breach their right to privacy.
Others argue that the spouses of cheating partners have a right to know what their other half is doing.
For in the years since Ashley Madison launched in the UK in 2010, the site has been responsible for many ruined marriages and relationships.
Despite the extreme ramifications of joining the site, Ashley Madison is astonishingly easy to use. Free to join, new members are asked to provide a user name and blurred photograph.
Users then select what they’re looking for, ranging from ‘cyber affair/ erotic chat’ to ‘anything goes’. It’s open to single and attached users, though those who sign up are predominantly married.
A victim said, "This site destroyed my marriage of 20 years,’ writes Bob, 47, a British contributor to a hate-filled online forum for spouses of the site’s users.
‘My ex-wife was active with five men on a regular basis. The site was recommended to her by a previous lover, and the end result for me was divorce. It ruined my marriage and my self-esteem. It was awful. The worst part was that in her profile, she completely described me in who she was looking to meet.’
Worse than breaking up individual marriages, experts say Ashley Madison and its ilk are doing untold damage to the institution as a whole. Harry Benson, research director at the Marriage Foundation, says such sites are ‘thoroughly unpleasant and misleading’.
‘They actively encourage people to look for an affair by making that option available,’ he adds
Culled from Mirror
*Can't imagine how many homes and hearts this website have broken, yet this thing is legal? This world and the things they legalize. The couple who started this website ought to be jailed for being responsible for millions of broken homes by making adultery attractive and luring men into have extra marital affairs, but unfortunately they are the ones the world celebrate. It's really a sick world. God have mercy.
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