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LoginTo make sure you never miss out on your favourite NEW stories , we're happy to send you some reminders. Click ' OK ' then ' Allow ' to enable notifications. If there's a sniff of a scandal, you know that Netflix producers are going to be all over it like a rash. It's been a couple of weeks since the three-part documentary dropped and knocked Baby Reindeer off the top spot, exposed the truth behind the website for extramarital affairs and the effect the data leak had on it's users. If you aren't aware already, Ashley Madison is a dating website specifically targeted towards married individuals who fancy having a fling that will stay secret - or so they thought. As you can imagine, numerous marriages were destroyed and several people lost their jobs following the security breach, which made names and addresses of users public knowledge - while at least two people committed suicide due to it. It wasn't just subscribers who's lives were turned upside down by the scandal though, as a former employee has now revealed what impact the fallout had on her, as well as discussing the company's questionable conduct over the years. Sarah Symonds has opened up about her time working as a publicist for the controversial dating website after the damning Netflix documentary 'opened old sores' for her. Speaking to The Sun, Symonds alleged that he asked her to go on dates with married men and to 'set up bogus profiles' to help entice people to sign up to the site, adding: "I found the whole thing sleazy and tawdry. As well as claiming Biderman wanted her to contradict her job role by venturing into the 'murky area' of dating subscribers, while also acting as the firm's publicist, she has said that the entire company 'was a contradiction'.
A new documentary exploring the data breach that exposed millions of affairs has dropped on Netflix. Extramarital dating app Ashley Madison saw users' private data become public when it was hacked in The site enticed droves of users looking to cheat on their partners with the tagline: "Life is short. Have an affair. The app claimed, due to its discreet nature, to have extensive security measures - but the breach and its fallout proved otherwise. Some 36 million users' details were released across three 'data dumps' in August
In , the identities of the 37 million users of infidelity website Ashley Madison were hacked and revealed online. The infamous hack of the dating website Ashley Madison led to multiple headline-making scandals — and now, a new Netflix documentary is revisiting the data leak and its aftermath. Ashley Madison rose to fame in the early s as the first — and only — dating website for married people seeking affairs. Ashley Madison was well on its way to realizing that vision when it all came crashing down in July What was going on in their relationships? But what is the true story of Ashley Madison and its hack?
By Kelsi Karruli For Dailymail. Ashley Madison users are dishing out scathing reviews about the dating site that is at the center of a soon-to-be released Netflix documentary. It was launched in as a dating site for spouses looking to be unfaithful and told those who had tied the knot to embrace infidelity , becoming known for its tagline, 'Life is short. Have an affair. More than 37 million unfaithful spouses took the bait and created a profile on the site in hopes of getting tangled up under the bedsheets with another married stranger.
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