Ashley Madison Launches in The Outback

The online dating service that outraged America has opened for business in Australia and apparently the women are relishing the temptation.

Weeks into a "soft opening" with no publicity or advertising, Australian women have adopted the Ashley Madison agency motto – "life is short, have an affair" – with an enthusiasm founder Noel Biderman says he's not seen before.

With the official launch of an Australian version of his online dating service for married or attached men and women, Biderman – defended his controversial venture.

"Marriage is looked at as this institution that never changes but that's just nonsense," the married father of two said.

"It's really only fairly recently that you chose your partner or married for love and one of the consequences of that is this rapid and high divorce rate we've seen throughout the world.

"Ultimately, the institution is always going to keep evolving and when something is not in our DNA, and monogamy is surely not in our DNA, then you can't help but wonder if it's on its last legs.

"I wouldn't have 5.5 million members if I wasn't doing something right."

"Rather than take a look at themselves in the mirror and wonder what's gone wrong in their relationship that would lead a partner to stray, people have fired off emails accusing me of being responsible for the breakdown of their relationship.”

Biderman said 40,000 Australians so far had joined the agency, which he started in Canada in 2001, fusing the two most popular children's names at the time to come up with AshleyMadison.com.

Membership is expected to grow to more than one million once a provocative television, billboard and online advertising campaign kicks off, he said.

The agency is free to join and works much like other dating services.

Users buy packages of "credits" for between $49 and $249 that enable them to interact with other users by way of a virtual wink, smile or rose.

Biderman said men and women joined for different reasons.

"I think ultimately for men it's about sex, this is about an absence of sex in their lives or sex being too ‘vanilla' and they're looking for different flavors," he said.

"I think with women it's a bit more complicated, to be honest with you.

Some women were looking for the "lifestyle benefits" that might accompany the mistress status, while others wanted to continue being objects of desire, Biderman said.

"They're not being brought flowers anymore and they're not being paid attention to so they're looking to rekindle that feeling," he said.

Biderman maintains the odd taste of illicit romance need not be the deal breaker it's made out to be.

"People who are happy in a monogamous marriage, that's incredible," he said.

"I'm just suggesting that the world over it seems to be that tens and tens of millions of people are not happy, at least when it comes to their sex lives.

"They're not necessarily willing to leave their partners, they're just looking for something on the side and maybe there's nothing wrong with that."

Full Article @ The Sydney Morning Herald

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2 Responses to “Ashley Madison Launches in The Outback”

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  1. I really like your website, been reading it for a while, but forget to check back in some times. I just found out what rss means and I subscribed, so I wont miss anything else!:)

  2. madison says:

    I’m sorry but this is horrible! “life is short, have an affair” wtf! the creators of this campaign our a bunch of home wreckers. I really hope that if they our married that their wives use their service against them to show them what it feels like. Now multiply that by hundreds of thousands of people who they persuaded to use their service. They disgust me! and shame on the people who sign up for this.

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