- cross-posted to:
- technology
- google@lemdro.id
- cross-posted to:
- technology
- google@lemdro.id
cross-posted from !google@lemdro.id
Original source: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2308.16321.pdf
- Researchers at the University of Wisconsin–Madison found that Chrome browser extensions can still steal passwords, despite compliance with Chrome’s latest security standard, Manifest V3.
- A proof of concept extension successfully passed the Chrome Web Store review process, demonstrating the vulnerability.
- The core issue lies in the extensions’ full access to the Document Object Model (DOM) of web pages, allowing them to interact with text input fields like passwords.
- Analysis of existing extensions showed that 12.5% had the permissions to exploit this vulnerability, identifying 190 extensions that directly access password fields.
- Researchers propose two fixes: a JavaScript library for websites to block unwanted access to password fields, and a browser-level alert system for password field interactions.
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Call Me M. ( @CallMeM@lemmy.ml ) 44•2 years agoor, hear me out, use firefox instead
Floey ( @Floey@lemm.ee ) 26•2 years agoI use Firefox but this is kind of silly. The real advice is use very few addons. On Firefox I use only ublock.
Valthorn ( @Valthorn@feddit.nu ) 11•2 years agoRemoves sunglasses My god! It’s so crazy it might actually work!