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LinkedIn is searching your browser extensions

read original get Browser Extension Scanner → more articles
Why This Matters

This investigation reveals that LinkedIn is secretly scanning users' browsers for installed extensions, collecting sensitive personal data without consent, and transmitting it to third parties. This practice raises serious privacy and legal concerns, highlighting the need for stricter regulation and oversight in digital data collection. For consumers and the tech industry, it underscores the importance of transparency and safeguarding user privacy in digital platforms.

Key Takeaways

LinkedIn Is Illegally Searching Your Computer

Microsoft is running one of the largest corporate espionage operations in modern history.

Every time any of LinkedIn’s one billion users visits linkedin.com, hidden code searches their computer for installed software, collects the results, and transmits them to LinkedIn’s servers and to third-party companies including an American-Israeli cybersecurity firm.

The user is never asked. Never told. LinkedIn’s privacy policy does not mention it.

Because LinkedIn knows each user’s real name, employer, and job title, it is not searching anonymous visitors. It is searching identified people at identified companies. Millions of companies. Every day. All over the world.

This is illegal and potentially a criminal offense in every jurisdiction we have examined.

(If you you’re in a hurry -> read our Executive Summary)

Who we are

Fairlinked e.V. is an association of commercial LinkedIn users. We represent the professionals who use LinkedIn, the businesses that invest in and depend on the platform, and the toolmakers who build products for it.

BrowserGate is our investigation and campaign to document one of the largest corporate espionage and data breach scandals in digital history, to inform the public and regulators, to collect evidence, and to raise funds for the legal proceedings required to stop it.

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