Clubhouse CEO Paul Davison has turned down the report that claimed the personal data of the audio-based chat app had leaked.
“No, This is misleading and false, it is a clickbait article, we were not hacked. The data referred to was all public profile information from our app. So the answer to that is a definitive ‘no’”, he told The Verge.
Earlier, Cyber News reported that an SQL database containing personal data of over 1 million Clubhouse users had leaked online. The alleged data included information, such as user ID, photo URL, Twitter handle, number of followers, and other details. The data, however, did not contain sensitive information such as credit card details or legal documents.
Interestingly, the same website had reported that the personal data of about 500 million LinkedIn users was scraped and leaked online. LinkedIn, however, maintained it did not face any data breach. The company said it was not a breach but “actually an aggregation of data from a number of websites and companies. It does include publicly viewable member profile data that appears to have been scraped from LinkedIn.”
In the case of Facebook, data scraping incident affected over 500 million users. The social media company added that data was scraped before September 2019 and that it had already fixed the problem.
ALSO READ: Things to know before you go shooting your mouth off on Clubhouse
That said, Clubhouse is increasingly becoming popular among users even though it is an invite-only app and exclusive to iOS so far. Its popularity has also prompted the technology giants such as Facebook and Twitter to introduce their versions. While Twitter has already launched Spaces, Facebook has begun testing Hotline in the US. Reddit, LinkedIn and many others are too working on Clubhouse-like services.
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