Gandalf_The_Grey
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- Apr 24, 2016
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Somebody brought to my attention that the Hide YouTube Shorts extension for Chrome changed hands and turned malicious. I looked into it and could confirm that it contained two undisclosed components: one performing affiliate fraud and the other sending users’ every move to some Amazon cloud server. But that wasn’t all of it: I discovered eleven more extensions written by the same people. Some contained only the affiliate fraud component, some only the user tracking, some both. A few don’t appear to be malicious yet.
While most of these extensions were supposedly developed or bought by a person without any other traces online, one broke this pattern. Karma shopping assistant has been on Chrome Web Store since 2020, the company behind it founded in 2013. This company employs more than 50 people and secured tons of cash in venture capital. Maybe a mistake on my part?
After looking thoroughly this explanation seems unlikely. Not only does Karma share some backend infrastructure and considerable amounts of code with the malicious extensions. Not only does Karma Shopping Ltd. admit to selling users’ browsing profiles in their privacy policy. There is even more tying them together, including a mobile app developed by Karma Shopping Ltd. whereas the identical Chrome extension is supposedly developed by the mysterious evildoer.
The Karma connection in Chrome Web Store
A bunch of malicious extensions in Chrome Web Store have hidden affiliate fraud functionality, collect users’ browsing profiles, or both. These extensions appear to be connected to the Karma shopping assistant, developed by Karma Shopping Ltd. which is not a small company.
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