Last week, a hacking ring calling itself "Impact Team" released a trove of information collected by Ashley Madison, a dating site that connected people looking to have extramarital affairs. Not only were details pertaining to more than 30 million Ashley Madison accounts leaked, but Impact Team also dropped a 30-gigabyte archive which it said encompassed e-mails from the company's CEO, Noel Biderman.

In one of the more salient exchanges, according to KrebsOnSecurity , Ashley Madison's Chief Technology Officer Raja Bhatia apparently e-mailed Biderman in 2012 to tell him that he had discovered a security hole in a site called nerve.com, which operated a dating platform that was an Ashley Madison competitor at the time. A few months before, Nerve had approached Ashley Madison's parent company, Avid Life Media, with an offer to partner with the company. E-mails suggested that Bhatia offered at least $20 million for Nerve and another website called flirts.com, but Ashley Madison ended up declining pursuit of the deal.

When Bhatia started probing Nerve's site for weaknesses, however, he found some interesting things. As he wrote to Biderman, “They did a very lousy job building their platform. I got their entire user base. Also, I can turn any non paying user into a paying user, vice versa, compose messages between users, check unread stats, etc.” Bhatia included a link to a sample of the database, apparently.

Six months later, ahead of a meeting with representatives from Nerve, Biderman asked Bhatia, “Should I tell them of their security hole?” If there was a response, it did not take place over e-mail.

The e-mails are just a portion of the information that's been made public pertaining to Biderman and those close to him. A quick sample of the archive showed wills, driver's license numbers, statistics pertaining to results from paid search ads (ostensibly for Ashley Madison and related properties), credit card numbers, as well as a retainer agreement for legal services detailing an incident in which Biderman was cited for speeding, not wearing a seat belt, and not carrying his license with him.

Motherboard also dug up what appears to be a 100-page movie script that Biderman wrote with writer, director, and producer Marc Morgenstern. The script, called In Bed With Ashley Madison, follows a struggling advertising executive named Sam, who decides to work with Ashley Madison, and as she learns more about her new client, she learns more and more about herself.