Meta reportedly says it needs to inject the script into websites to respect privacy choices. Fastlane founder Felix Krause has revealed that Facebook and Instagram's in-app browsers inject JavaScript ...
In-app browsers are bunk compared to full-featured browsing apps, but they’re also a major privacy and security risk. Many apps sneak data trackers onto websites you visit through their in-app browser ...
A new online tool named 'InAppBrowser' lets you analyze the behavior of in-app browsers embedded within mobile apps and determine if they inject privacy-threatening JavaScript into websites you visit.
We wrote last week about research showing that Meta takes advantage of the in-app browser feature on mobile devices to inject JavaScript into web pages viewed in the Facebook, Instagram, and Messenger ...
If you visit a website you see on Facebook and Instagram, you've likely noticed that you're not redirected to your browser of choice but rather a custom in-app browser. It turns out that those ...
The breach hit core JavaScript libraries such as chalk and strip-ansi, downloaded billions of times each week, raising alarms over the security of open-source software. Hackers have compromised widely ...
Researcher Adam Logue discovered the data-stealing exploit, which abuses M365 Copilot's built-in support for Mermaid diagrams ...
Both Apple and Google are doing great work to prevent multi-site tracking. Google Chrome is slowly phasing out cookies, and Apple goes the furthest by asking users to block multi-app/multi-site ...
Yep. I noticed this when my router went down and I had to sign onto their wifi via one of their hotspots. It's annoying as all hell and I guess the thing that made the least sense to me is... if I'm ...