Popular VPN extension for Google Chrome is a security nightmare, screenshots every page users visit and sends them to anonymous developer — FreeVPN.One flagged over enormous privacy concerns

2 weeks ago 19
FreeVPN.one
(Image credit: freevpn.one)

Koi Security has revealed that a popular Google Chrome extension with more than 100,000 installs has been taking screenshots of every website its users visit and sending them to a domain controlled by the software's anonymous developer.

The extension in question, FreeVPN.One, claims to be "the fastest free VPN for Chrome [sic]" and boasts a "Featured" badge that Google awards to extensions that "follow our technical best practices and meet a high standard of user experience and design." But it turns out FreeVPN.One has been undermining its users' privacy for months.

"While VPN extensions legitimately need permissions like proxy and storage for core functionality," Koi Security said, "this one asks for more permissions that enable broad data collection." The company identified a trio of permissions—tabs, and scripting—that allow FreeVPN to inject a script into every website its users visit. "Seconds after any page loads, a background trigger grabs a screenshot and sends it to aitd[.]one/brange.php, bundled with the page URL, tab ID, and a unique user identifier," the report explains. "No user action, no UI hint, the screenshots are taken in the background without you ever knowing."

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Nathaniel Mott is a freelance news and features writer for Tom's Hardware US, covering breaking news, security, and the silliest aspects of the tech industry.

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