A new report is alleging LinkedIn uses hidden JavaScript to scan its visitors’ browsers for installed extensions, looks for those that compete with its own sales tools, and then twists its users’ arms until they stop using those and pick LinkedIn’s products, instead.
However the social network says this is a smear campaign run by a disgruntled extensions developer who lost a court battle in Germany. An “association of commercial LinkedIn users” called Fairlinked e.V published a report detailing “BrowserGate” – claiming LinkedIn scans for thousands of browser extensions and ties the results to identifiable user profiles – and by scanning, LinkedIn harvests personal and corporate information.
Read more…
Source: TechRadar News
Sign up for the Cyber Security Review Newsletter
The latest cyber security news and insights delivered right to your inbox
Related:
- Threat Actors are Interested in Generative AI, but Use Remains Limited
August 17, 2023
Since at least 2019, Mandiant has tracked threat actor interest in, and use of, AI capabilities to facilitate a variety of malicious activity. Based on Mandiant own observations and open source accounts, adoption of AI in intrusion operations remains limited and primarily related to social engineering. In contrast, information operations actors of diverse motivations and capabilities ...
- Patch-resistant autonomous exploits of Citrix NetScaler hardware hit thousands in Europe
August 17, 2023
Researchers have found an expansive and active threat campaign that exploited a severe Citrix NetScaler vulnerability to backdoor thousands of devices, including those that were subsequently patched. Attackers automated the exploitation of the remote code execution vulnerability, tracked as CVE-2023-3519, to place Web shells on vulnerable devices. These were found to persist through patches and reboots. Read ...
- LinkedIn user accounts have been taken over in huge hacking campaign
August 16, 2023
Someone is targeting LinkedIn accounts, trying to break in with either login credentials leaked elsewhere, or with brute-force attacks. As a result, many people have had their accounts compromised, while others have been locked out due to too many failed login attempts. Read more… Source: TechRadar
- China’s Ministry of State Security warns of data security risks after Wuhan Earthquake Monitoring Center cyberattack
August 16, 2023
China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS) on Wednesday warned of data security risks after recent reports identified US intelligence agencies were behind a cyberattack on Wuhan Earthquake Monitoring Center. A joint investigation team formed by the National Computer Virus Emergency Response Center (CVERC) and Chinese cybersecurity company 360 discovered malicious backdoor software that exhibits characteristics of ...
- Cyber crimes in Germany down 6.5% in 2022, federal police say
August 16, 2023
Cyber crimes in Germany fell by 6.5% in 2022, federal police said on Wednesday, but the decline was not a “relief” as the attacks were more severe and those originating from overseas rose by more than 8%. The economic damage was 203 billion euros ($221.59 billion), down slightly from last year, but still double that of ...
- More than 100,000 hackers have details exposed through malware on cyber crime forums
August 15, 2023
Researchers have revealed that more than 100,000 hackers could be operating on compromised devices due to their involvement on cyber crime forums. A study from Hudson Rock identified around 120,000 devices infected with malware that contained login credentials for cyber crime forums. The firm said that many of the individuals operating with compromised machines may have ...

