Clubhouse CEO Paul Davison declared the report alleging the leak of personal user data "false."

A Cyber ​​News report reported that a database of user IDs, names, usernames, Twitter and Instagram identifiers and the number of followers had been published in an online hacker forum.

According to the site, it does not appear that sensitive user information, such as credit card numbers, was among the information leaked, containing 1.3 million user records.

A question was asked to the clubhouse president about the validity of the information that mentioned that the application's users' information was among this leak, and he replied, “This is misleading and wrong, and the Clubhouse has not been hacked, and the data referred to is the general information of the account within our application, which anyone can access. To it via our application or API.

These responses raise some questions about the company's privacy stance that allows anyone to collect public information for the accounts on a large scale.

And last week, Cyber ​​News reported that the personal data of up to 500 million Linkedin users had been collected and published online.

The Microsoft-owned company said, "No private member account data from LinkedIn was included in the leak."

The news came just two days after it was discovered that the personal data of some 533 million Facebook users had been leaked online for free.

The Facebook leak reportedly included users' phone numbers, dates of birth, geographical locations, email addresses and full names.

Despite being invite-only and available for iOS devices only, Clubhouse achieved impressive results in its first year, with more than 10 million downloads.

Twitter and LinkedIn have launched rival social podcasts, and Facebook is said to have one in development as well.