The Ashley Madison hack was not justice on some dodgy cheaters. It was a crime.
In the days immediately following the Ashley Madison hack, the world gleefully celebrated the news that hackers had exposed the user data of roughly 32 million cheaters.
There was something so wonderfully pervy, so smugly easy to get behind, so delightfully titillating about the story. When the hack exposed self-described ‘family man; Josh Duggar as a cheating hypocrite, no media outlet could resist that juicy tale (including Mamamia).
But now the dust is settling, the real human cost of the Ashley Madison hack is becoming clear.
Some of the mostly-male users named in the hack have been not just humiliated, but exposed to risk of imprisonment and even death.
A gay man from Saudi Arabia has taken to Reddit to share his fears that leaked data from Ashley Madison’s Down Low site — which caters for “married men seeking other men for casual, no-strings fun” — will expose him to the death penalty under his nation’s laws.
“For many gay people around the world, being outed is a life-threatening experience,” he wrote. “The risks for us are greater than the risks for married Westerners cheating on their spouses. That’s why AM’s promise of discretion appeals to us.”
He’s far from alone in his dilemma. According to The Morning Bulletin, Data leaks monitoring firm CybelAngel reports it has already counted 1,200 Ashley Madison account email addresses from Saudia Arabia. Meanwhile, more than 50 of the leaked accounts trace back to Qatar, where gay sex is punishable by up to five years in jail, and a user list on PasteBin.com reveals at least one user email account from Iran, where adultery can be punished by stoning, lashing, or death.
Top Comments
... then why have you delighted - in another story on mamamia - in using the names of people who came up in this hack, to deride them and cast your judgement on them. (the Amy Stockwell story).
Cheating is wrong, blah blah, yadda yadda, but people need to realise the serious consequences of what these "hero hackers" did. I'm personally looking forward to when a major bank gets hacked and see how all these people defending the hackers feel about it all then. Fun times