As a result of the Honey expose, Google has now changed its Chrome extension policies concerning affiliate ads and marketing.
The post Google is updating its Chrome extension polices after Honey scandal appeared first on Android Headlines.
New policies restrict extensions from injecting affiliate links unless they provide direct, transparent benefits to users.
A new update to Google's Chrome Web Store policy should help protect shoppers from dubious affiliate marketing extensions.
Last year, the browser extension Honey got caught up in controversy over how it took affiliate revenue away from creators.
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Google updates Chrome extension rules to ban affiliate link injection without user action or benefitAlthough not specifically stated, by large the community agrees that PayPal’s Honey extension forced Google’s arm here. For those with shorter memory spans, two months ago a YouTuber named MegaLag ...
Google has updated its affiliate advertising policy for Chrome extensions following allegations against popular Honey browser ...
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Moving forward, Google Chrome extensions can only use affiliate links, discount codes, and cookies if they offer a clear, ...
Folks have been finding ways to run Android games on Windows PCs for almost as long as Android’s been around. But in 2022 Google launched its own official platform called Google Play Games for Windows ...
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