As a result of the Honey expose, Google has now changed its Chrome extension policies concerning affiliate ads and marketing.
New policies restrict extensions from injecting affiliate links unless they provide direct, transparent benefits to users.
Honey was accused of taking affiliate revenue from the same influencers it paid for promotion by using its Chrome extension ...
The post Google is updating its Chrome extension polices after Honey scandal appeared first on Android Headlines.
Last year, the browser extension Honey got caught up in controversy over how it took affiliate revenue away from creators.
New rules are essentially banning Honey from the browser, but not everyone agrees it should be up to Google to decide.
Following the dispute over a PayPal shopping add-on, Google is setting new guidelines. In future, users must be able to ...
Google Chrome has banned certain practices used by shopping-related extensions in the wake of the Honey influencer ...
Google has updated its affiliate advertising policy for Chrome extensions following allegations against popular Honey browser ...
Scammers are using a legitimate PayPal address to send fraudulent purchase notifications to users in an attempt to gain ...
Paypal offers "No Code Checkout" pages as a function. Fraudsters misuse them to advertise on Google and lure victims.
Google Chrome announced a policy update, restricting how browser extensions can engage with affiliate codes.Google announced ...