LinkedIn is facing two lawsuits over its practice of scanning users’ browsers to determine which extensions they’re running.
Christian Wenz explains why the Backends for Frontends (BFF) pattern is emerging as a more secure authentication model for single-page applications.
Cross-border travel has been affected for the second day in a row by fuel protests in the Republic of Ireland. Slow-moving ...
GEODIS in Switzerland has achieved a significant milestone in solidifying its healthcare logistics capabilities, obtaining ...
ACC Aviation has appointed Jack Burt as Senior Vice President of Cargo, as the group accelerates the expansion of its Global ...
Watch highlights as Portadown draw 1-1 with Carrick Rangers in the Irish Premiership at Shamrock Park. You can find a summary ...
A parrot discovered at Dublin Airport has been safely reunited with its owner, thanks to the efforts of airport staff and the ...
LinkedIn says it scans extensions to prevent invasive web scraping and calls the California lawsuits 'a house of cards built ...
The Northern Ireland Football League (NIFL) has launched an awareness campaign against violence towards women called ...
The BrowserGate material says the extension checks include products that compete with LinkedIn’s own sales offerings, such as Apollo, Lusha and ZoomInfo, as well as tools associated with job hunting.
Your store has a new customer. It doesn't have eyes. It doesn't feel urgency from a countdown timer. It evaluates your data ...
A BrowserGate investigation alleges LinkedIn secretly scans over 6,000 browser extensions and builds device fingerprints ...