>>3126887 (lb)
Quicken Loans came out of Quicken when Intuit named everything Quicken this or Quick<that>, Quickbooks, etc. At that time they were a nobody company left for dead after Microsoft couldn't buy them out.
Right around (just after) Quicken Loans (which they no longer own) is when they started donating heavily to politicians, worked with state governments to ensure no flat tax and that governments couldn't provide no (low) cost electronic software of their own and became a major player in the valley. Take a look at their stock price before and after (especially recently).
If you use their "platforms"
They have all your tax information
All your personal financial information
All your business information
They know you whether or not you do business with them because if you use a small business you are in their database (thought you weren't doing business with Google and boycotting them, see below) and if you use an accountant vs turbotax, most likely the accountant uses their tax software and hence your information is in their cloud. Did you get any privacy information from your accountant on where your private tax data is?
Oh and by the way there was an unexpected retiring of senior management in the last month.
https://www.fool.com/investing/2018/08/24/intuit-announces-leadership-changes-what-you-shoul.aspx
and they tightly partnered with google a couple of years ago, coincidentally right about when the stock went on a tear. How safe is your data?
https://www.fool.com/investing/2016/11/04/is-googles-partnership-with-intuit-a-win-win.aspx