Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Leaked Data Can't Be Linked To Specific Members, Ashley Madison Says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Aug, 2015 12:33 PM
    TORONTO — Personal information about Ashley Madison clients exposed in a massive data breach this week doesn't prove their infidelity, the adultery website said Thursday as it took pains to reassure nervous members and suspicious spouses.
     
    The company investigating the breach for Ashley Madison confirmed the website doesn't verify email addresses used to sign up for the service, nor does it collect phone numbers or store full credit-card numbers.
     
    "This means that anyone could have used any email address to sign up for an account," Joel Eriksson, the chief technology officer for Toronto cyber-security company Cycura, said in an email.
     
    "So a list of email addresses is not proof of anyone's membership."
     
    He added that Avid Life Media, Ashley Madison's parent company, doesn't check the authenticity of email addresses, precisely to ensure no account can be conclusively linked with a specific person.
     
    "By not having email verification, users have plausible deniability with regards to their membership status," he said.
     
    "Note that verification of email addresses are mostly relevant to sites that harvest personal information as a part of their business model, and want to tie each user to an identity. In this case, that would not be in the best interest of either the users nor (Avid Life Media)."
     
    People can speculate based on the data leak, Eriksson added, but there's no smoking gun.
     
    Scouring the data for familiar names or email addresses among the site's more than 35 million registered members has become a popular pastime for worried spouses and curious Internet users worldwide.
     
    There are hundreds of email addresses in the data release that appear to be connected to federal, provincial and municipal workers across Canada, as well as to the RCMP and the military.
     
    Cycura is investigating the breach along with the FBI, RCMP, OPP and Toronto Police Services.
     
    Eriksson says the source code used by Avid Life Media is being audited for "vulnerabilities and backdoors" though it doesn't appear that any software vulnerability was exploited in the breach.
     
     
    Ontario government technology experts are also looking into the leak after dozens of provincial email addresses were linked to Ashley Madison account-holders. Provincial officials say if any civil servants used their work emails to set up their Ashley Madison accounts, that would be considered a misuse of government IT resources.
     
    Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur's office says "information and technology officials are looking into whether any misuse has occurred."
     
    A spokesman for the Manitoba government said the province has a policy stipulating that "employees must not access Internet sites that might bring the government of Manitoba into disrepute." Those who violate it may face disciplinary action that could include dismissal.
     
    Two law firms are attempting to launch a class-action lawsuit against Ashley Madison's parent company. Their lead plaintiff is an Ottawa man who joined after his wife of 30 years died. The proposed class action alleges the privacy of thousands of Canadians was breached.
     
    South of the border, The Associated Press reported that hundreds of U.S. government employees — including some with sensitive jobs in the White House, Congress and law enforcement agencies — used Internet connections in their federal offices to access and pay membership fees to Ashley Madison.
     
    The federal workers 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 U.S. counterterrorism response team.
     
    Few actually paid for their services with their government email accounts. But the 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, Defence, Justice, Energy, Treasury, Transportation and Homeland Security. Others came from House or Senate computer networks.
     
    The AP did not name the government subscribers it found because they are not elected officials or accused of a crime.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sask. Gov Wraps Up Public Consultations On Farmland Ownership Restrictions

    Sask. Gov Wraps Up Public Consultations On Farmland Ownership Restrictions
    Saskatchewan's agriculture minister says almost all options are on the table as the government considers the future of farmland ownership restrictions in the province.

    Sask. Gov Wraps Up Public Consultations On Farmland Ownership Restrictions

    Man Who Found Knife Blade In Back Three Years After Stabbing Files Lawsuit

    Man Who Found Knife Blade In Back Three Years After Stabbing Files Lawsuit
    YELLOWKNIFE — A man from the Northwest Territories has filed a lawsuit against health officials claiming they failed to find a knife blade buried in his back for three years.

    Man Who Found Knife Blade In Back Three Years After Stabbing Files Lawsuit

    Judge allows sailors charged in sex assault to return to U.K. until trial

    Judge allows sailors charged in sex assault to return to U.K. until trial
    HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia Supreme Court judge has ruled three British sailors charged with a sexual assault in Halifax can return to the United Kingdom while on bail.

    Judge allows sailors charged in sex assault to return to U.K. until trial

    NDP wastes little time connecting return of Duffy trial to campaign trail

    NDP wastes little time connecting return of Duffy trial to campaign trail
    OTTAWA — The NDP wasted little time Wednesday in using the return of Mike Duffy as political leverage against the Conservatives, while Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau seemed to want to wash his hands of it.

    NDP wastes little time connecting return of Duffy trial to campaign trail

    Dozens Drop Out Of 'biased' Energy Board Review Of Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Dozens Drop Out Of 'biased' Energy Board Review Of Trans Mountain Pipeline
    Dozens of participants have dropped out of the controversial National Energy Board review of Kinder Morgan's proposed Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, saying they can no longer support a "biased" and "unfair" process.

    Dozens Drop Out Of 'biased' Energy Board Review Of Trans Mountain Pipeline

    Class Action Lawsuit Alleges Abuse At Ontario Schools For The Deaf

    Class Action Lawsuit Alleges Abuse At Ontario Schools For The Deaf
    A Toronto man alleges he was abused for years at Ontario schools for the deaf and has launched a class action lawsuit on behalf of other former students against the provincial government.

    Class Action Lawsuit Alleges Abuse At Ontario Schools For The Deaf