Linkedin searches your computer for any installed browser extensions and shares it with shady cybersec companies, including your clear name etc. (browsergate.eu)
from Nooodel@lemmy.world to privacy@lemmy.ml on 02 Apr 15:36
https://lemmy.world/post/45075556

#privacy

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Nighed@feddit.uk on 02 Apr 15:40 next collapse

* browser extensions

Nooodel@lemmy.world on 02 Apr 15:49 collapse

Thanks for pointing it out

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 02 Apr 15:49 next collapse

I’m sorry, how exactly is a website searching my computer from within a locked down browser?

fatcat@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Apr 16:16 collapse

browsergate.eu/how-it-works/

I can’t tell you if that’s technically sound but that’s what was said on the page linked…

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 02 Apr 16:31 next collapse

Oh, browser extensions. And specifically on chromium browsers.

Yeah, that makes much more sense than “any installed software”. It also throws out their claim of this being illegal. Using a browser API endpoint to say “hey do you have this extension” isn’t illegal, at least in most countries.

Is this shitty behavior? Yes. Is this anywhere near what their clickbait title and honestly clickbait article claim? Not in the slightest.

fatcat@discuss.tchncs.de on 02 Apr 17:06 collapse

The title is shit but they explain why they think it’s illegal: browsergate.eu/why-its-illegal/

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 02 Apr 18:51 collapse

Eh, I can see how that might work under EU law. So I suppose there’s a potential for it to be illegal in the EU then.

Though I do question the extent that could reach, since “left leaning lesbians looking for work only browser” could be the user agent if someone was so inclined. Admittedly though, that’s outside the scope of this argument.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 02 Apr 17:55 collapse

Okay, so is there a browser plugin that can hide the plugins that I have installed?

KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 02 Apr 18:52 collapse

Don’t use a chromium browser, from the looks of it.

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 02 Apr 17:56 next collapse

And they send me over 2.5mb of javascript code for this shit?

Why oh why is the internet such a shit place these days?

Greedy fucking C suite execs. That’s why

phoenixz@lemmy.ca on 02 Apr 17:58 next collapse

Why it’s illegal and potentially criminal

LinkedIn scans your browser for installed extensions every time you visit the site. It does this without asking, without telling you, and without any mention in its privacy policy.

Cool! Send the fucking CEO to jail. Send a fucking message. If I break the law, I go to jail, can we PLEASE give them the same treatment already?

iamthetot@piefed.ca on 02 Apr 20:37 collapse

Keep dreaming.

Goldenring@lemmy.ca on 02 Apr 18:38 next collapse

I’m glad I didn’t upload my profile pic. I shut the website down in 2016

AthanAster@lemmy.ml on 03 Apr 00:54 next collapse

So this is basically fingerprinting extensions? They aren’t scanning your system but it’s still invasive if they aren’t mentioning this anywhere. Seems like a browser level issue, not really illegal in most places, but definitely shady behavior that should be flagged.

Nooodel@lemmy.world on 03 Apr 06:30 collapse

They save that with your clear name making it a GDPR violation, as they a) don’t have a legit reason to do so and b) fail to disclose it in their data processing notifications

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 04 Apr 22:45 collapse

Why people keep using Linked In is beyond me. It never has been anything more than a data mining operation with people gladly giving them all their real details.

Remember when Linked IN became the man in the middle of your emails? It would read them and send email to your contacts list.

Microsoft has said after they purchased them that they were only in it for the data. This is no secret.

I will not hire people who put linked in on their resumes, as I have to assume they are just stupid.