An online liaison may even take place in the same room with one's spouse."In the words of one 41-year-old man in the study, "All I have to do is turn on my computer, and I have thousands of women to choose from.(It) can't get any easier than that." Counseling organizations report chat rooms are the fastest-rising cause of relationship breakdowns, and the problem only stands to get worse as today's population of Internet users continues to grow, Mileham said."The Internet will soon become the most common form of infidelity, if it isn't already," she said.In the same month the company dropped its signature tagline “Life is Short.Have an Affair.” to "Find your moment" and updated its brand imagery to replace the image of a woman wearing a wedding ring with a red gem-shaped symbol as its logo.This resulted in the suggestion that, whenever a woman had no children by her own husband, the state ought to allow her to live with another man.On the same principle, and for the purpose of preventing the extinction of his family, Spartan King Anaxandridas II was allowed to live with two wives.This paradigm was notably questioned in Socratic dialogues; the Stoics produced the first recorded condemnation of slavery.
It was founded in 2002 by Darren Morgenstern, with the slogan: "Life is short.The institution of marriage in ancient Greece encouraged responsibility in personal relationships.Marriages were usually arranged by the parents; professional matchmakers were reluctantly used.Unlike some fatal attractions, a simple click of a mouse button ends contact – should the person want to break it off – without any explanations or apologies, she said.Mileham conducted in-depth online interviews with 76 men and 10 women, ages 25 to 66, who used Yahoo's "Married and Flirting" or Microsoft's "Married But Flirting," Internet chat rooms geared specifically for married people.More data (including some of the CEO's emails) was released on August 20, 2015.The release included data from customers who had earlier paid a fee to Ashley Madison to allegedly have their data deleted.