"Hundreds of thousands" of new members joined the website last week, according to owner Avid Life Media.
Details of more than 33 million accounts were stolen from the website and published online in August.
On Friday, the company's chief Noel Biderman stepped down. The firm said the move was in its "best interests".
Angels
In
August, a huge dump of the company's data was posted online. It
included the personal details of millions of members, and thousands of
Noel Biderman's emails.
The data led to questions being asked about the number of females actively using the website.
Some
of the emails alluded to the creation of artificial profiles called
Ashley's Angels. One email suggested staff were experiencing "writer's
block" when creating them.
Number one
"Some
journalists have turned the focus of the criminal act against Ashley
Madison inside out, attacking us instead of the hackers," the company
said on Monday.
The statement said journalists had made "incorrect assumptions" about the number of female users on the website.
"Last week alone, women sent more than 2.8 million messages within our platform", the company said.
"The
ratio of male members who paid to communicate with women on our service
versus the number of female members who actively used their account
(female members are not required to pay to communicate with men on
Ashley Madison) was 1.2 to 1.
"These numbers are the main reason that Ashley Madison is the number one service for people seeking discreet relationships."
Prior
to the hack, the firm had announced plans to float on the stock
exchange in London later this year, with the aim of raising up to $200m
(£134m).
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