"Google updated its policies in December to prevent software developers from using extensions to insert advertising on more than one part of a page. A form of malware called adware injects ads on multiple spots of a web page, including places ads don’t normally exist, for example on Google’s sparse home page. Google says extensions must have “a single purpose,” and be “narrow and easy-to-understand.”Google Removes Two Chrome Extensions Amid Ad Uproar - Digits - WSJ
While “Add to Feedly” and “Tweet This Page” had small numbers of users, their kind of situation could be more pervasive: The owners of far more popular extensions say they have been offered money to incorporate ad code into their extensions."
Monday, January 20, 2014
Google Removes Two Chrome Extensions Amid Ad Uproar - Digits - WSJ
Extension mutation
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