A set of 30 malicious Chrome extensions that have been installed by more than 300,000 users are masquerading as AI assistants to steal credentials, email content, and browsing information.
The Chrome Web Store has been infested with dozens of malicious browser extensions claiming to provide AI assistant functionality but that secretly are siphoning off personal information from victims.
Despite ongoing efforts by Google to tighten security, malicious browser extensions continue to find their way onto the Chrome Web Store — and into users’ ...
That frustration is exactly where StopTheMadness Pro comes in. Instead of trying to change how the web looks, it focuses on stopping websites from messing ...
More than 300 Chrome extensions were found to be leaking browser data, spying on users, or stealing user information.
Hundreds of popular add‑ons used encrypted, URL‑sized payloads to send search queries, referrers, and timestamps to outside servers, in some cases tied to data brokers and unknown operators.
The “New Tab” page in Chrome is the digital equivalent of a blank stare. A white void. Nothing, and plenty of it. Why are we settling for this? Your browser’s ...
Criminals are pushing surveillance tools into the Google Chrome Web Store ...
Cybersecurity researchers have uncovered a serious threat hiding inside Google Chrome. Several browser extensions pretend to be helpful tools. In reality, they quietly take over user accounts. These ...
Malicious Chrome extensions posing as productivity tools were found stealing session tokens, blocking security controls, and enabling account takeover across popular enterprise HR and ERP platforms. A ...