How many Google Chrome extensions are covered?
Sopa Photographs/LightRocket via Getty PhotographsTwo recent reviews clearly reveal other assessments related to the security of the Chrome browser extension. While Google says less than 1% of all installs come with malware, Day College researchers say 280 million customers have installed extensions with malware over a three-year period. No amount of stuff fills me with much confidence.
According to Google there are over 250,000 extensions available on Chrome Internet Pack. Google additionally states that “Less than 1% of all installs from the Chrome Web Store were found to contain malware,” so why don’t I find this to be as reassuring as possible?
An updated paper by researchers at Stanford University and the CISPA Helmholtz Center for Data Security sheds light on incidents involving security-notable browser extensions for Chrome. According to the study, more than 346 million users installed most of these extensions between July 2020 and February 2023. Even excluding the 63 million policy violations and 3 million with potential codes, researchers estimate there are still 280 million installed. Chrome extension containing malware.
The researchers in question, Sheryl Hsu, Manda Tran and Aurore Faas, published their paper on June 18. It is surprising to see that the study covers violations of Google’s Internet Pack policy and prone code, including extensions containing malware in SNE. Definition. Alternatively, I’m max into the malware aspect of things. Not least because extensions often require complex permissions that can impact consumer privacy and security, and it is these permissions sought that form the basis of attack for any rogue extension.
Learn about reviews, “We collected permissions by parsing each extension’s manifest.json file,” Manifest V3 permissions are defined as “permissions (APIs like storage or cookies) and host permissions (the URL or URL pattern that an extension wants to request.” is divided into. to)” is mixed within each previous manifest V2.
Not surprisingly, the researchers found that suspicious extensions generally invited additional permissions more than benign extensions. “Ultimately, the more permissions an extension has, the larger the attack surface,” the study concluded.
Also of concern was that information about extensions found to contain malware was available from Chrome Web Pack for an average of 380 days. One, as mentioned, remained available from December 2013 until June 2022, when it was discovered to contain malware and was removed.
A June 20 posting on the Google Security Blog, just 48 hours after researchers published their study via Benjamin Ackerman, Anunnoy Ghosh and David Warren of the Chrome security team, acknowledged that “like any application, extensions Can be presented.” Risks.” Alternatively, it also details how there is a dedicated security team dedicated to keeping Chrome users safe when it comes to extensions. Google said that this team will provide users with an update on installed extensions. Provides personalized summaries, reviews all extensions before they are printed on Chrome Web Pack and displays them after some time.
An example of this is a security testing panel at the top of the extensions web page that prompts customers on any installed extensions that may possibly provide a possibility. Google noted that “If you don’t see a warning panel, you probably don’t have any extensions you need to worry about,” though that comment is open to debate rather than reading about Stanford. Let it be given.
As mentioned, Google’s automated process using machine-learning programs examines all extensions that are printed on Web Pack, and subsequently conducts a human assessment on each extension’s photos, descriptions, and public policies. “This review process removes the majority of bad extensions before they are even published,” Google noted, adding, “In 2024, less than 1% of all installs from the Chrome Web Store were found to contain malware We’re proud of this record, and yet some bad extensions still pop up, which is why we also monitor published extensions.
Google recommends that Chrome users do four things to reduce the risk of corrupt extensions being backed up:
This post was published on 06/24/2024 3:57 am
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