Friday, April 3, 2026
ADVT 
National

Security Breach On Ashley Madison Website Won't Change Cheating Ways: Experts

The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2015 11:44 AM
    TORONTO — Cheating spouses who fear their secret online liaisons could be revealed in the Ashley Madison data breach faced a tough lesson this week about flirting with danger on the Internet.
     
    But experts say getting people to change their wicked ways won't necessarily be as simple as threatening to divulge past indiscretions.
     
    Whether it's a steamy conversation on Facebook with a high-school flame or a random encounter at the bar, adultery is hardly a new phenomenon.
     
    "People have been having extramarital affairs for long before the Internet facilitated those liaisons," said Matthew Johnson, a relationship specialist in human ecology at the University of Alberta.
     
    "Infidelity is not going to stop because people are all of the sudden scared their personal information is going to leak on a website."
     
    Still, questions about the fallout of the breach linger as Toronto-based website AshleyMadison.com reels from a cyberattack where hackers stole confidential details about its cheating customers and threatened to post them online.
     
    A small amount of that information was briefly released by hackers before Ashley Madison executives had it pulled off search engines using the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, the company said.
     
    This certainly isn't the first time data has been stolen in recent years.
     
    Government websites have temporarily shut down to prevent hackers from stealing information, while companies like Sony and Target Corp. have taken major financial hits from massive customer and employee data breaches.
     
    What makes the security breach at Ashley Madison different is that it literally hits home for many people and could face irreversible consequences in their marriages or long-term relationships.
     
    Prof. David Skillicorn, who specializes in computers and hacking at Queen's University in Kingston, Ont., said the breach also reveals the extent to which people are willing to take risks and reveal intimate details online without thinking about the repercussions.
     
     
    For years, Ashley Madison boasted to its 37 million international members that its security measures were practically impenetrable, which Skillicorn suggests was never a realistic claim.
     
    "If you're dealing with dynamite content, it's a bit disingenuous not to fess up and say: 'You better assume that everything you put on here will eventually leak,'" he said.
     
    "That's the reality of the world at the moment."
     
    Warning signs about faulty security at "discreet" websites became glaringly apparent when Adult Friend Finder, a website for swingers and hookups, was breached in May. Hackers stole personal customer data for 3.5 million users and posted it on underground websites.
     
    "This didn't seem to raise flags with those people, so I think that's a commentary on how much the culture has still not taken on board the issues of Internet security," Skillicorn said.
     
    One question that remains is how Ashley Madison's security breach could impact the future of its business.
     
    Earlier this year, the company said it was hoping to make a second attempt at an initial public offering in London, valued at up to $200 million. If successful, the move would have helped the company acquire capital to build a stronger business, particularly in Asia where it saw booming customer growth.
     
    Nothing was certain about that IPO before the hack, especially since the company failed to launch a similar move in Canada five years ago, but chances are investors won't be willing to risk their money on a company in the midst of a crisis.
     
    Ashley Madison, which is owned by Avid Life Media Inc., may now have to settle for much smaller ambitions as its business faces a variety of potential troubles, including members cancelling their accounts and the possibility of lawsuits from angry customers if any of their information is leaked.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Stephen Harper Invites Muslim Leaders To 24 Sussex To Break The Ramadan Fast On Monday

    Stephen Harper Invites Muslim Leaders To 24 Sussex To Break The Ramadan Fast On Monday
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper may have made Canadian history Monday night, inviting Muslim leaders to 24 Sussex to break the Ramadan fast.

    Stephen Harper Invites Muslim Leaders To 24 Sussex To Break The Ramadan Fast On Monday

    Banning Medical-marijuana Edibles Bad For Patients: B.C. Civil Rights Group

    Banning Medical-marijuana Edibles Bad For Patients: B.C. Civil Rights Group
    VANCOUVER — A British Columbia civil rights group is asking the City of Vancouver to reconsider its plans to ban dispensaries from selling edible forms of medical marijuana.

    Banning Medical-marijuana Edibles Bad For Patients: B.C. Civil Rights Group

    Canadian Chain Stops Selling Confederate Flags

    Canadian Chain Stops Selling Confederate Flags
    The decision, posted by The Flag Shop on its Twitter account, follows a statement by the chain's president saying she doesn't want to "react hastily" by pulling the flag from shelves.

    Canadian Chain Stops Selling Confederate Flags

    Toronto Police Arrest Two In Connection With Sina Parsi Death

    Toronto Police Arrest Two In Connection With Sina Parsi Death
    Police say both Clyde Marshall, a former resident of New Brunswick, and Sabrina Chouart of Gatineau, Quebec, are scheduled to appear in court on Tuesday.

    Toronto Police Arrest Two In Connection With Sina Parsi Death

    Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths

    Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths
    A task force appointed by the provincial government after two New Brunswick boys were killed by an African rock python in 2013 is calling for the immediate inspection of all sites where exotic animals are kept.

    Regulation Of Exotic Animals Gets Greater Scrutiny In New Brunswick After Deaths

    Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces

    Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces
    A man who jumped onto the back of a moose as it swam across a lake could face animal-harassment charges in British Columbia, but would likely escape the threat of prosecution for a similar stunt in another province given Canada's patchwork of animal-rights laws

    Man Who Rode Moose In B.C. Lake Not At Prosecution Risk In Other Provinces