Ashley Madison owner says website still adding users after data hack


  • TECH
  • Tuesday, 01 Sep 2015

Having faith: Media reports predicting the imminent demise of Ashley Madison are greatly exaggerated, said the company in a statement.

TORONTO: Hundreds of thousands of people signed up for infidelity website Ashley Madison, parent company Avid Life Media said on Monday, even after hackers leaked data about millions of its clients.

The company also struck back at reports that the site had few genuine female users, saying internal data released by hackers had been incorrectly analysed.

"Recent media reports predicting the imminent demise of Ashley Madison are greatly exaggerated," the company said in a statement. "Despite having our business and customers attacked, we are growing."

On Aug 18, hackers who claimed to be unhappy with Avid Life's business practices released Ashley Madison customer data. A second data dump contained thousands of emails and other company documents. Reuters has not independently verified the authenticity of the data, emails or documents.

Last week, tech blog Gizmodo published a widely cited analysis of the customer data, concluding that very few female members had ever checked the site for messages.

Avid Life said on Monday that an unnamed reporter had wrongly concluded that the number of active female members on Ashley Madison could be calculated based on assumptions about the meaning of fields contained in the leaked data.

"Last week alone, women sent more than 2.8 million messages within our platform," Avid Life said, adding that 87,596 women had also signed up for Ashley Madison last week.

Gizmodo published another post on Monday, saying it had arrived at a low number of active female users "based in part on a misunderstanding of the evidence."

On Friday, Avid Life said chief executive officer Noel Biderman had left the company by mutual agreement.

For at least three years before the publication of details about its members, Avid Life had been struggling to sell itself or raise funds, according to internal documents and e-mails that hackers also released. — Reuters

Limited time offer:
Just RM5 per month.

Monthly Plan

RM13.90/month
RM5/month

Billed as RM5/month for the 1st 6 months then RM13.90 thereafters.

Annual Plan

RM12.33/month

Billed as RM148.00/year

1 month

Free Trial

For new subscribers only


Cancel anytime. No ads. Auto-renewal. Unlimited access to the web and app. Personalised features. Members rewards.
Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In Tech News

TikTok artists and advertisers to stay with app until 'door slams shut'
TikTok to suspend TikTok Lite's reward programme amid EU concerns
ASML approves Christophe Fouquet as CEO at annual meeting
AT&T beats estimates for subscriber additions, free cash flow
Exclusive-Google rival Tuta complains to EU tech regulators about de-ranking
Microsoft's AI lead puts Amazon cloud dominance on watch
TE Connectivity beats quarterly profit estimates on sensor demand
UK watchdog seeks views on Microsoft's and Amazon's AI partnerships
Texas Instruments' upbeat Q2 forecast pushes chip stocks higher
Italy fines Amazon over ‘recurring’ purchase option

Others Also Read