"Under New Management" keeps an eye on the Chrome Web Store, looking for new developer names that show up when extensions are sold off.
Under New Management alerts you when your other browser extensions come under control of new owners, highlighting potential scam risks.
Google is testing a new feature in the Chrome browser that will warn users when an installed extension has been removed from the Chrome Web Store, usually indicative of it being malware. An unending ...
Google is hosting dozens of extensions in its Chrome Web Store that perform suspicious actions on the more than 4 million devices that have installed them and that their developers have taken pains to ...
With Google's recent flagging of the popular Save as Image Type Chrome extension, now is a good time to take stock of all ...
This has been a long time coming, but starting today, Chrome users on Windows will only be able to install extensions from Google’s own Chrome Web Store. Google argues that this is meant to keep ...
Opera blacklisted the version of Tampermonkey that is currently offered on the Chrome Web Store as it is being installed by Windows malware. This prevents the extension from working in the Opera ...
Chrome extensions are supposed to make your browser more useful, but they've quietly become one of the easiest ways for attackers to spy on what you do online. Security researchers recently uncovered ...
I stopped relying on Chrome extensions and realized my browser worked better without them.
Chrome on Android still lacks extension support, despite other browsers offering this feature.