A team of security researchers have found malware in a popular Chrome extension which may have sent the browsing data of over 1.2m users to a single IP address. ScrapeSentry credits its researchers with uncovering "a sinister side-effect to a free app [...] which potentially leaks [users'] personal information back to a single IP address in the USA". . Martin Zetterlund, one of ScrapeSentry's founders, told The Register that the extension's malicious functions would have been difficult to recognise through an automated auditing service because the sneaky developer had ensured this functionality is not downloaded until seven days after being installed.. The link for this article located at The Register UK is no longer available. . Investigators disclose a malicious code embedded in a Firefox add-on, causing the exposure of data from more than 800,000 individuals to a suspicious server.. Chrome Extension Data Leak, Malware in Extensions, Browser Security Risks. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A flaw in the way the Firefox and Opera browsers handle an image file could allow an attacker to see what Web sites a person has visited. The problem concerns how the two browsers handle a ".BMP," or bitmap, image file, according to an advisory written by Gynvael Coldwind of Vexillium.org, who posted a video illustrating the problem. I always find it interesting when two pieces of software together can cause a security vulnerability.. The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . Recent investigations reveal a critical vulnerability in Opera and Firefox that risks user web history due to improper handling of image files and metadata extraction. Web History Exploit, Browser Image Flaw, User Privacy Breach. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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