Re: Website For Adulterers Hacked! Glory!!
More widespread sin and perversion is exposed and the perpetrators brought to public attention and shame.
Praise Jesus!
More widespread sin and perversion is exposed and the perpetrators brought to public attention and shame.
Praise Jesus!
Hackers dump SECOND, even bigger batch of Ashley Madison records with taunting message to millionaire founder of 'cheating dirtbag' site
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A second, even bigger, 'cheat sheet' exposing the users of adultery website Ashley Madison has been released.
Hacking group 'the Impact team' at lunchtime on Thursday released another mine of documents and confidential information to back up their first 9.7 gigabyte leak, according to Vice.
The new documents were dumped with a taunting message to the adultery website's founder as exposed users began to publicly admit their involvement.
'Hey Noel, you can admit it's real now,' read the post - presumably directed at the company's millionaire CEO Noel Biderman, who has refused to admit the material is all legitimate.
The new - even bigger - 20GB release will do little to calm the nerves of the cheaters whose personal details have been exposed.
The Associated Press traced many of the accounts exposed by hackers back to federal workers.
They included at least two assistant U.S. attorneys; an information technology administrator in the Executive Office of the President; a division chief, an investigator and a trial attorney in the Justice Department; a government hacker at the Homeland Security Department and another DHS employee who indicated he worked on a counter-terrorism response team.
AP traced their government Internet connections — logged by the website over five years — and reviewed their credit-card transactions to identify them. They included workers at more than two dozen Obama administration agencies, including the departments of State, Defense, Justice, Energy, Treasury, Transportation and Homeland Security. Others came from House or Senate computer networks
Sony, Boeing and the United Nations are among those institutions whose domain names appear in the long lists of alleged users.
Bank staff also make regular appearances. Marketwatch counted up bank domain names to reveal 175 from Wells Fargo, 76 from Bank of America, 73 from Deutsche Bank, 51 from Citigroup, 45 from Goldman Sachs, 28 from PNC Bank, 15 at U.S. Bancorp, 14 at Bank of New York Mellon, nine at J.P. Morgan Chase and four at Capital One.
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A second, even bigger, 'cheat sheet' exposing the users of adultery website Ashley Madison has been released.
Hacking group 'the Impact team' at lunchtime on Thursday released another mine of documents and confidential information to back up their first 9.7 gigabyte leak, according to Vice.
The new documents were dumped with a taunting message to the adultery website's founder as exposed users began to publicly admit their involvement.
'Hey Noel, you can admit it's real now,' read the post - presumably directed at the company's millionaire CEO Noel Biderman, who has refused to admit the material is all legitimate.
The new - even bigger - 20GB release will do little to calm the nerves of the cheaters whose personal details have been exposed.
The Associated Press traced many of the accounts exposed by hackers back to federal workers.
They included at least two assistant U.S. attorneys; an information technology administrator in the Executive Office of the President; a division chief, an investigator and a trial attorney in the Justice Department; a government hacker at the Homeland Security Department and another DHS employee who indicated he worked on a counter-terrorism response team.
AP traced their government Internet connections — logged by the website over five years — and reviewed their credit-card transactions to identify them. They included workers at more than two dozen Obama administration agencies, including the departments of State, Defense, Justice, Energy, Treasury, Transportation and Homeland Security. Others came from House or Senate computer networks
Sony, Boeing and the United Nations are among those institutions whose domain names appear in the long lists of alleged users.
Bank staff also make regular appearances. Marketwatch counted up bank domain names to reveal 175 from Wells Fargo, 76 from Bank of America, 73 from Deutsche Bank, 51 from Citigroup, 45 from Goldman Sachs, 28 from PNC Bank, 15 at U.S. Bancorp, 14 at Bank of New York Mellon, nine at J.P. Morgan Chase and four at Capital One.
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