Hack of Ashley Madison Website for Affairs Reveals Many .edu Addresses
Some professors are thanking God for tenure.
Inside Higher Ed reports.
Extracurricular Activities
The hack of the Ashley Madison website, where those seeking extramarital affairs could theoretically communicate privately, has led to much analysis of the 36 million names of registrants now publicly available. More than 15,000 accounts, for example, were hosted by government agencies or the military, according to The Hill.
It turns out that there are far more .edu email addresses than there are .gov or .mil. Inside Higher Ed’s IT team downloaded the database hackers have posted and found 74,468 unique email addresses (from among the 83,863 .edu addresses over all, with thousands having registered more than once).
Several important cautions about the data: Ashley Madison does not verify email addresses, although the advantage of the website was supposed to be confidentiality, and communication between would-be adulterers would have been difficult with a totally fake address. Many colleges and universities offer email addresses for alumni as well as students and current and former employees, so it’s unclear what percentage of these addresses are those of employees. But many colleges also have multiple addresses for email, such as “engineering.name.edu.” Inside Higher Ed’s tally does not include those additional email addresses.
To those whose email accounts are in the database, don’t worry — we’re not naming names.
Hack of Ashley Madison website for affairs reveals many .edu addresses (Inside Higher Ed | News)