Microsoft found a malicious Chrome extension impersonating the AI search engine Perplexity that quietly logged users' searches and address-bar input. Calling itself "Search for perplexity ai" and using a look-alike domain, it set itself as the default search engine and routed every query through an attacker server, which logged it with the user's IP and browser details before redirecting to a real engine so results looked normal. Worse, it also pointed the browser's live search suggestions at the attacker, so each character typed in the address bar was sent before the user even pressed Enter. Microsoft found no password theft, but far more access than a search tool needs. Google removed it.
Researchers at Island found that a popular Chrome extension, "Adblock for YouTube," with more than 10 million installs and a Featured badge, contains the machinery to run arbitrary JavaScript on any website the user visits. The extension works as advertised, but it can fetch a rule from its server that creates script elements with attacker-supplied content, giving access to page data, sessions, and forms. The capability is dormant, not absent: switching it on takes a single server-side change, with no extension update and no store review. The add-on changed ownership years ago, requests access to all sites, and is linked to other extensions previously pulled for malware.