In what is becoming a regular occurrence, yet another big tech company, this time Quora, has suffered a data breach. This comes close on the heels of Dell being hacked, which I wrote about only less than a week ago. The regularity of this is becoming tiring.

How did the Quora news unfold?

This is what I got yesterday in my email.

In other words, Quora allowed someone to access to my data, and the data of its other 100,000,000 users. In response, Quora said that it is looking into how it happened, and has employed a “leading digital forensics and security firm to assist [them]”.

Dear Giles Ensor, We are writing to let you know that we recently discovered that some user data was compromised as a result of unauthorized access to our systems by a malicious third party. We are very sorry for any concern or inconvenience this may cause. We are working rapidly to investigate the situation further and take the appropriate steps to prevent such incidents in the future.

What information was accessed?

In case you want to be secure while surfing the internet, you will need to get a full-dedicated tool to secure your network.  Install now Cyberghost VPN and secure yourself. It protects your PC from attacks while browsing, masks your IP address and blocks all unwanted access.

This is what was accessed according to Quora:

  • Account and user information, e.g. name, email, IP, user ID, encrypted password, user account settings, personalization data
  • Public actions and content including drafts, e.g. questions, answers, comments, blog posts, upvotes
  • Data imported from linked networks when authorized by you, e.g. contacts, demographic information, interests, access tokens (now invalidated)
  • Non-public actions, e.g. answer requests, downvotes, thanks
  • Non-public content, e.g. direct messages, suggested edits

How may you be affected?

Fortunately, Quora collects only basic information on its users. It does not collect or store information such as credit cards or social security numbers. However, you email address has value. You certainly need to watch out for phishing email scams or other types of spam (although that is always true).

  • RELATED: Stop Google and Facebook from collecting your personal data

In fairness to Quora, I should point out that not all of its users have been affected. Having said that, even if it is only 10% of users who have had their data stolen, that is still 10,000,000 email addresses that can be used for various nefarious activities.

What can you do next?

Well, that is up to you. I have a feeling that many people are resigned to this type of news, and accept it as part and parcel of life on the internet. I am not one of those people.

It is now much easier to delete your Quora account. All you need to do is go to your Privacy Settings page click the ‘Delete my account” button at the bottom of the page. That’s what I did.

Wrapping it all up

It is time that people start to take more action when data breaches occur. The value of any company like Quora is only in its users, and without its 100,000,000 users, Quora would have no value at all.

Far be it from me to tell you what to do, but by deleting your account and withdrawing your participation, you are taking the one action that Quora, and other websites, will take notice of.

RELATED ARTICLES YOU SHOULD CHECK OUT

  • Is Your Privacy Threatened In Windows 10?
  • Microsoft acknowledges major SSD encryption security issue
  • LinkendIn’s auto-fill plugin reportedly leaked user data

If the advices above haven’t solved your issue, your PC may experience deeper Windows problems. We recommend downloading this PC Repair tool (rated Great on TrustPilot.com) to easily address them. After installation, simply click the Start Scan button and then press on Repair All.

Still having issues? Fix them with this tool:

SPONSORED

  • Cybersecuritynewsquora

Email *

Commenting as . Not you?

Comment