| ▲ | kmeisthax 4 hours ago | |
Wasn't this specifically some lame-ass attempt to combat some click fraud or something these extensions were doing? And aren't these articles specifically coming from the person doing the fraud (which is why they know about the extension scanning)? To be clear, LinkedIn shouldn't be scanning your browser extensions, but still. The ultimate problem is that browser extensions are a powerful malware vector and there's a huge market of people buying little utilities off of solo developers to enshittify them. | ||
| ▲ | dnnddidiej 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
> LinkedIn shouldn't be scanning your browser extensions. Correct Yes there are other problems in the world and we can JAQ the messanger too. | ||
| ▲ | cxr 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
> Wasn't this specifically some lame-ass attempt to combat some click fraud or something these extensions were doing? No. That you believed that was just an unfortunate consequence of HN's kneejerk tendency to upvote middlebrow dismissals to the top comment, which resulted in people rushing to craft apologetics for what is in reality bonafide scumminess on LinkedIn's part, which itself resulted in confabulations like the claim that, "It was all extensions related to spamming and scraping LinkedIn last time this was posted"—which is simply untrue. | ||