Post: Ashley Madison hacked
07-20-2015, 04:47 PM #1
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({}); So as some may know Ashley Madison is a online website made for affairs. The site was hacked and the hackers threaten to put database information online if the website is not taken down for good. You must login or register to view this content. is a article about everything that happened. 37 million users would be affected by the leak.
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Chop
07-22-2015, 11:25 PM #20
Ajax Blue
Bounty hunter
Originally posted by 1UP View Post
Actually it is a crime. This also depends on where you live. In the USA the type of crime it is can vary from state to state,


It's not a crime. Just because some puritanical bylaws aren't stricken don't make them enforced or criminalized.
07-22-2015, 11:50 PM #21
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Oneup
Guest
Originally posted by Ajax
It's not a crime. Just because some puritanical bylaws aren't stricken don't make them enforced or criminalized.


Still illegal. So how is that not a crime exactly? Doesn't matter if it's enforced, it's still in the books.
Just going to leave this here:
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07-23-2015, 02:46 AM #22
Originally posted by 1UP View Post
I can't be the only person who read the thread title and immediately though it was a porn site.


I thought it was the start of Fappening 2 Sal

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SpiderBish
07-23-2015, 01:47 PM #23
Ajax Blue
Bounty hunter
Originally posted by 1UP View Post
Still illegal. So how is that not a crime exactly? Doesn't matter if it's enforced, it's still in the books.
Just going to leave this here:
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Because legislative authority stops at unenumerated rights. To say it's a crime, you have to first assert that it is a legislative issue under legal parameters. Courts in the free world will settle a divorce, not touching the act of adultery. It's cute how the extreme examples in the article fall out of the free world - as if various Muslim countries have any respectable validity to a discussion of freedom or authority.
07-23-2015, 02:39 PM #24
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Oneup
Guest
Originally posted by Ajax
Because legislative authority stops at unenumerated rights. To say it's a crime, you have to first assert that it is a legislative issue under legal parameters. Courts in the free world will settle a divorce, not touching the act of adultery. It's cute how the extreme examples in the article fall out of the free world - as if various Muslim countries have any respectable validity to a discussion of freedom or authority.


Like it or not it's a crime. You can make up any form of excuse but it is what it is.
07-23-2015, 03:29 PM #25
SpiderBish
Big Daddy
Argument in the comments is more informative then the post...
07-24-2015, 02:39 AM #26
WiseMonkey
Little One
Cool story and eh why not just leak it already lmao Cool Troll
07-24-2015, 07:55 AM #27
ResistTheSun
In Flames Much?
They should have used protection to avoid this......
07-25-2015, 02:57 AM #28
tunde1992
League Champion
Originally posted by Ajax
Because legislative authority stops at unenumerated rights. To say it's a crime, you have to first assert that it is a legislative issue under legal parameters. Courts in the free world will settle a divorce, not touching the act of adultery. It's cute how the extreme examples in the article fall out of the free world - as if various Muslim countries have any respectable validity to a discussion of freedom or authority.


Despite how much i hate your tone and condescending attitude, i do have to agree with you that this was a little extreme,but i don't much care about the incident, what i do care about are your stands on adultery and whether it is immoral or not. I'm not asking whether it should be illegal or not.

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