Facebook Photos Help Woman Uncover Husband's Secret Disney-Themed Marriage
To nobody's surprise, a recent study claimed that more couples are finding evidence of marital infidelity via Facebook. After all, if somebody's doing something, no matter how innocuous or unsightly, it's probably going to get posted on the social networking site. According to the AP, Lynn France, of Westlake, Ohio, learned this the hard way when she discovered that her husband John had a second ...
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We knew that Facebook has torn apart many a marriage across the pond. But according to a recent survey, it's become just as problematic for couples here in the US, too.
A survey of high-profile divorce lawyers throughout the country reveals that increasing numbers of quarrelsome couples are now using Facebook data as evidence of marital infidelity. As attorney Mary Cay Trace told ...
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A good workman never blames his tools. And a good adulteress should never blame hers, either. Just don't tell that to Gabriella Nagy, who, after having her extramarital affair unearthed by her husband, has decided to sue her cell phone company for allowing it to happen.
It began in 2007, when Nagy opened an account with the Canadian service provider Rogers. According to the contract, ...
There's no question that the social networking boom has led to an increase in cheating spouses. But what might be surprising is that social networking is being more commonly used in the courtroom -- as evidence.
According to the New York Post, a recent survey from the American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers shows that 81-percent of the lawyers questioned said they've used evidence from social ...
Australians worried about cheating spouses also need to be wary of private investigators and Web sites trying to take advantage of their vulnerability. Numerous private investigation firms in Australia are now offering services which include mobile phone monitoring. There's only one problem. It's illegal. According to the Australian Surveillance Devices Act, private investigators have to ...
Real-life married couple Amy and David Pollard have filed for divorce in England due to a dispute over Mr. Pollard's 'Second Life' character (called an "avatar") having virtual sex with the avatar of another woman, the Telegraph tell us. Mr. and Ms. Pollard -- who, themselves, first "met" on 'Second Life' -- had been married (in geek bliss we'd imagine) for three years until Ms. Pollard ...
It's safe to say most wives would be mad if they caught their husband having virtual sex in Second Life. When Amy Taylor caught her husband with another woman's avatar, the infidelity might as well have been real. Taylor and her husband, David Pollard, are divorcing after three years of geekily wedded bliss after Pollard, described as a "jobless 40-year-old," was caught doing the online ...








