As a result of the Honey expose, Google has now changed its Chrome extension policies concerning affiliate ads and marketing.
Last year, the browser extension Honey got caught up in controversy over how it took affiliate revenue away from creators. Instead of only taking credit when it saved users money, Honey attempted to ...
Honey was accused of taking affiliate revenue from the same influencers it paid for promotion by using its Chrome extension ...
Google updates its policy after YouTuber MegaLag details a scheme under which the PayPal-owned Honey swapped creators' affiliate links for its own.
A new update to Google's Chrome Web Store policy should help protect shoppers from dubious affiliate marketing extensions.
Moving forward, Google Chrome extensions can only use affiliate links, discount codes, and cookies if they offer a clear, direct benefit at checkout, like real discounts or cash rebates. Extensions ...
Google has updated its affiliate advertising policy for Chrome extensions following allegations against popular Honey browser ...
Google Chrome has made a policy update today that restricts how browser extensions can interact with affiliate codes, effectively banning the behavior of the controversial PayPal Honey extension.
In the wake of the controversy surrounding PayPal's Honey browser extension, Google Chrome has updated its policies to ban the practices that the extension was observed to be engaging in.
After being exposed for some shady practices last year, PayPal’s popular Honey extension has finally been forced to disclose ...
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