If you haven’t been following this whole Ashley Madison situation, just know that shit is basically hitting the fan for the controversial online dating service, which built its empire by marketing to people who are married or in a committed relationship.

Last week, hackers managed to leak more than 30 million user profiles stolen from the site’s servers, advising users to take legal action against Ashley Madison. According to The Globe and Mail, the break has triggered legal threats, online scams, extortion attempts, and two possible suicides.

All the while, Ashley Madison are basically watching their company collapse from underneath them. As police pursue an investigation into the hack, Toronto police acting staff superintendent Bryce Evans said the company is offering a $500,000 bounty for information leading to the prosecution of the hackers.

As the investigation into the hack continues, details of just how it was executed continue to surface and according to the Independent, the hackers behind the attack first alerted Ashley Madison staff to the breach with the help of a homegrown Aussie band.

As the Independent reports, Ashley Madison staff found out their servers had been infiltrated after hackers set their laptops to play the AC/DC classic ‘Thunderstruck’, the same song used by hackers who planted a virus in an Iranian nuclear facility back in 2012.

During a recent press conference in Toronto, Canadian police revealed a raft of details about the leak, including that two clients of the site are thought to have killed themselves and that the site’s owners are offering a hefty reward for information on the hackers.

However, as the Independent reports, journalists who attended the conference were left a little bit puzzled when documents handed out as they arrived included a print-out of the lyrics to AC/DC’s 1990 rock radio staple.

Police later explained that the message hackers’ set to display on employees’ laptop screens was accompanied by the sound of Angus Young’s immortal riff blaring from their speakers, though it’s not clear why that particular song was chosen and not ‘Beating Around The Bush‘.

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