LinkedIn is facing two lawsuits over its practice of scanning users’ browsers to determine which extensions they’re running.
The BrowserGate material says the extension checks include products that compete with LinkedIn’s own sales offerings, such as Apollo, Lusha and ZoomInfo, as well as tools associated with job hunting.
The move signals a deeper push into military and government markets as the company positions its technology for expanded real ...
LinkedIn reportedly injects a JavaScript fingerprinting script to probe visitors' browsers for 6,236 installed Chrome ...
Samsung Internet Browser, the company’s Android web browser app, is now known as Samsung Browser. The name change is reflected in the latest version of the app we tested running on the Galaxy S26 ...
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Although AI has introduced a new threat in the world of payments fraud, it has also emerged as the analytical backbone of ...
Learn how to create and manage multiple Gmail accounts safely using an anti‑detect browser designed to separate digital fingerprints and reduce detection risks. This video explains practical ...
A new family of Android click-fraud trojans leverages TensorFlow machine learning models to automatically detect and interact with specific advertisement elements. The mechanism relies on visual ...