this post was submitted on 06 Sep 2023
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The problem then becomes that extensions are still in control of everything else on the website: A malicious extension could simply hide or move the input field away and then create a new one in its place.
Personally, I don't see how one could make extensions secure without severely crippling their functionality or turning it into a game of cat and mouse.
If an extension is blocked by the browser from accessing the value of any input field, text node content and recording keystrokes how can it then manipulate pages in a way that grants access to passwords?
The extension designer would have to actually create functionality which plausibly needs those permissions granted. Which would put a big dent in the "hello, if you want to monetize your extension put this code in it" type of scammers trying to gain access to that information via an extension that helps you zoom into images or whatever
Then they could recreate their own input field by recreating their own "totally-not-an-input-field" with a canvas element and a bit of JS. Or, if that also gets blocked, just straight up redirect the user to a phishing site by replacing the login button or some other means. Plenty of people probably wouldn't notice in time.
That's a whole lot of effort compared to how they are able to phish now, which is launder their code by paying some (perhaps unsuspecting) extension developer to include an external dependency in their well-established extension.
Such effort as you're describing would be harder to pull off, easier to spot and limit the victim pool significantly all at the same time.
The methods they described are very common hacking techniques once a site is compromised. They are not difficult nor more work than you'd expect, not out of the realm of normal work for a hacker with a site they can tweak.