San Francisco Chronicle

Quora says data breach affected 100 million users

- By Raymond Zhong

Users of Quora, the question-and-answer site, are now asking:

Did my personal data just get stolen?

The social network said late Monday that the account informatio­n and private messages of about 100 million users may have been exposed when its computer systems were compromise­d by “a malicious third party.” Quora discovered the data breach Friday, CEO Adam D’Angelo wrote in a blog post, and it is still investigat­ing how it happened.

“It is our responsibi­lity to make sure things like this don’t happen, and we failed to meet that responsibi­lity,” D’Angelo wrote.

The Mountain View company said that the incident will probably not result in identity theft, because the site does not collect sensitive informatio­n such as credit card or Social Security numbers.

But coming less than a week after the Marriott hotel chain announced that hackers had stolen the personal data of up to 500 million guests, the incident serves as another reminder that a vast and expanding portion of our lives is vulnerable to digital intrusion.

Quora commands a huge audience. The company says that 300 million people around the world use its site

at least once a month to ask and answer questions about politics, faith, calculus, unrequited love, the meaning of life and more. By comparison, Twitter claims 326 million monthly active users.

But since it blasted onto the social media landscape in 2010, igniting a blaze of interest among tech company employees, Quora has not become the mainstream cultural force that Twitter has, for better or for worse. That is perhaps why some Quora users reacted to news of the security breach with surprise — not that their account informatio­n may have been accessed by malicious actors, but that they had a Quora account in the first place.

The company seemed to acknowledg­e such reactions this week. A page of frequently asked questions about the attack includes the query: “I didn’t know I had a Quora account. How is it that my email or informatio­n was exposed?”

Its answer: “You may have signed up for Quora some time ago. While you might not have regularly visited or used Quora, your account remained.”

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