Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Loading...
Close Menu
  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Earth
  • Health
  • Physics
  • Science
  • Space
  • Technology
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram

Quantumis

  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Earth
  • Health
  • Physics
  • Science
  • Space
  • Technology
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest YouTube
Quantumis
Home » » PayPal-owned Honey accused of deceptive practices and more

PayPal-owned Honey accused of deceptive practices and more

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Telegram LinkedIn WhatsApp Email Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Telegram Email Reddit

When PayPal acquired the shopping service and browser extension Honey, many thought that the $4 billion that the company paid was a steep price for the service.

Honey has faced its fair share off criticism in the past. A YouTuber claims now that he has uncovered deceptive business practices that impact users of the extensions but also the very people that promoted Honey.

Honey is a browser extension. Once installed, it is highlighting discounts and other beneficial codes when users visit shopping sites. It is not the only extension or service that promises that. Microsoft did even integrate its own service directly into its Edge browser.

Here is the YouTuber's video:

Accusations against Honey pile up

The YouTuber MegaLag claims that Honey is bad for customers, webmasters, and also influencers who advertised the service.

One of the main claims surrounds the setting of affiliate cookies. According to the information, Honey is said to save affiliate cookies on user systems unethically.

Good to know: affiliate cookies are used to determine payments to third-parties. A basic example is a webmaster to adds a link with an affiliate code to a website. When a user clicks on the link to visit the linked resource, an affiliate cookie may be placed so that the linked resource can pay the webmaster when the visitor makes purchases.

Honey is saving affiliate cookies when users activate coupons, when users use the cashback program Honey Gold, and even when there are not any discounts in the service's database and the user confirms that, according to the report.

The main issue, according to the YouTuber, is that Honey overwrites cookies from websites or other creators.

In other words: Honey will be paid when a user of the extension makes a purchase, not the webmaster or content creator who lead the visitor there. Apart from that, cookies may allow sites and marketers to track users.

How influencers may lose money with Honey

PayPal-owned Honey has sponsored videos on YouTube and maybe also other platforms. Popular YouTube creators such as Mr.Beast or Linus Tech Tips have recommended honey.

Problem is: when the same YouTubers use affiliate links for products that they recommend in their videos, Honey may interfere and overwrite their codes in the affiliate cookie with its own. The YouTuber does not earn any money when a user buys something on the linked shopping site, as Honey is getting the money instead.

More issues

Another issue surrounding Honey according to the researcher is that Honey is not always showing the best discounts. The service prioritizes offers from partners and may also ignore codes submitted by users of the app, if the codes interfere with partners.

Closing Words

Back in 2021, Ashwin suggested that Internet users who valued their privacy should not be using Honey. The new investigation adds weight to that suggestion. It needs to be verified independently though.

What is your take on extensions like Honey? Do you use them to save on the Internet? Feel free to leave a comment down below.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Email Reddit

Related Articles

Firefox update makes watching videos a more enjoyable experience

Windows Utility WinUtil is a one-stop shop to customize Windows

It is not surprising that Windows 11 is growing and Windows 10 is falling - but here is what is suprising

Keyzing: a reference when buying software online

Windows Recall: Microsoft's second launch attempt after devastating criticism

Stellar Data Recovery Free Edition will Recover your Old Data for your New School Year

How to upgrade to Windows 11 24H2 on unsupported hardware

Windows 10 Support ends in exactly 1 year - here are your options

Google Chrome: removal of uBlock Origin and other unsupported extensions has started

Brave Search introduces AI follow-up questions - here is how it works

Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Trending News

You can remove Recall from Windows if you do not want it (Update: or not)

Google will disable some of its own Chrome extensions soon

How to restore the WordPad text editor in Windows 11

FlyBy11: update introduces more Windows 11 installation options and plugins

Microsoft releases the November 2024 security updates for Windows

Overwhelmed by Your Inbox? Here’s How to Reclaim Control

Firefox-maker Mozilla's boosted revenue significantly in 2023, but the financial report may also raise concern

Google files remedies proposal in DOJ's antitrust case

Microsoft changes account sign-in system to keep users logged in automatically

Android 16 Beta 1 is out: here is what is new or changing

Follow Quantumis
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube
  • Pinterest
SciTech News
  • Biology News
  • Chemistry News
  • Earth News
  • Health News
  • Physics News
  • Science News
  • Space News
  • Technology News
Recent Posts
  • The Windows Windows App is real - replacing Remote Desktop app
  • iOS 18.0.1 fixes iPhone touch screen problems and performance issues
  • Windows 10: Microsoft reveals ESU price tag for home users and a big catch
  • The Windows security updates for January 2025 are now available
  • Meet UI-TARS: The Open-Source AI Agent Taking Tech by Storm
  • Meet Operator: The Advanced AI Tool That Can Make Purchases and Manage Expenses
Copyright © 2025 Quantumis. All Rights Reserved.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use