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Fake AI Chrome extensions with 300K users steal credentials, emails. A set of 30 malicious Chrome extensions that have been installed by more than 300,000 users are masquerading as AI assistants to steal credentials, email content, and browsing information. Some of the extensions are still present in the Chrome Web Store and have been installed by tens of thousands of users, while others show a small install count. Researchers at browser security platform LayerX discovered the malicious extension campaign and named it AiFrame. They found that all analyzed extensions are part of the same malicious effort as they communicate with infrastructure under a single domain, tapnetic[.]pro. According to them, the most popular extension in the AiFrame campaign had 80,000 users and was called Gemini AI Sidebar (fppbiomdkfbhgjjdmojlogeceejinadg), but it is no longer on the Chrome Web Store. However, BleepingComputer found that other extensions with thousands of users are still present on Google's repository for Chrome extensions. It should be noted that the names may be different in some cases, but the identification is the same. LayerX found that all 30 extensions share the same internal structure, JavaScript logic, permissions, and backend infrastructure. The malicious browser add-ons do not implement AI functionality locally; instead, they deliver the promised feature by rendering a full-screen iframe to load content from a remote domain. This, by itself, is risky, as publishers can change the extensions’ logic at any time without pushing an update - just like in the case of Microsoft Office Add-ins - thus avoiding a new review. In the background, the extensions extract page content from websites the user visits, including sensitive authentication pages, using Mozilla’s Readability library. LayerX says that a subset of 15 extensions specifically targets Gmail data, using a dedicated content script that runs at ‘document_start’ on ‘mail.google.com’ and injects UI elements. The script reads visible email content directly from the DOM and repeatedly extracts email thread text via ‘.textContent.’ The researchers note that even email drafts can be captured. “When Gmail-related features such as AI-assisted replies or summaries are invoked, the extracted email content is passed into the extension’s logic and transmitted to third-party backend infrastructure controlled by the extension operator,” LayerX explains in a report today. “As a result, email message text and related contextual data may be sent off-device, outside of Gmail’s security boundary, to remote servers.” The extensions also feature a remotely triggered voice recognition and transcript generation mechanism using the ‘Web Speech API,’ returning the results to the operators. Depending on the granted permissions, the extensions may even siphon conversations from the victim’s environment. BleepingComputer has contacted Google for a comment on LayerX findings, but we have not received a response by publication time. It is recommended to check LayerX's list of indicators of compromise for the complete set of malicious extensions. If compromise is confirmed, users should reset passwords for all accounts. The future of IT infrastructure is here Modern IT infrastructure moves faster than manual workflows can handle. In this new Tines guide, learn how your team can reduce hidden manual delays, improve reliability through automated response, and build and scale intelligent workflows on top of tools you already use.

Daily Brief Summary

MALWARE // Malicious AI Chrome Extensions Compromise 300,000 Users' Credentials

Researchers at LayerX identified a campaign of 30 malicious Chrome extensions, known as AiFrame, affecting over 300,000 users by stealing credentials and email content.

The extensions masquerade as AI assistants, with some still available on the Chrome Web Store, while others have been removed.

AiFrame's most popular extension, Gemini AI Sidebar, had 80,000 users but is no longer available; other extensions remain active with thousands of users.

All extensions share a common backend infrastructure and use JavaScript to extract sensitive data, including Gmail content, without implementing local AI functionality.

The extensions utilize Mozilla’s Readability library to capture page content and a dedicated script to target Gmail data, potentially compromising email security.

A voice recognition feature allows for the extraction of conversations, furthering the risk to users' privacy and data security.

Users are advised to consult LayerX's indicators of compromise and reset passwords if affected, while Google has yet to comment on the findings.