Browser add-ons have a funny reputation. They feel “small”. A quick install. A tiny productivity boost. A harmless little helper that lives in your toolbar.
But in practice, a browser extension is more like a micro-SaaS vendor sitting inside your browser session. It can see what you see, interact with the pages you open, and sometimes access the same cloud apps your business runs on all day.
That’s why a browser extension security check matters.
Not because every extension is bad, but because it only takes one over-permissioned add-on or one bad update to turn “helpful” into exposure.
The good news is you don’t need a 40-page policy to reduce the risk. A simple five-minute check can prevent most extension problems before they start.
Browser extensions sit in the most sensitive place in modern work: the browser tab where your staff live all day.
That matters because extensions aren’t just “apps”. They’re granted special authorisations inside the browser. That makes them attractive targets and gives them leverage that’s disproportionate to how “small” they feel.
UC Berkeley’s guidance says extensions get “special authorisations,” and the more you install, the bigger the attack surface becomes.
The risk is often permission-based. OWASP calls out “permissions overreach” as a core problem. Extensions can request more access than they need, including access to “all tabs, browsing history, and even sensitive user data.”
When an extension can read and modify what happens in the browser, it can potentially see data in cloud tools, capture what’s typed into forms, or alter content on a page.
It’s also a “change over time” risk. A useful extension today can become a different extension tomorrow and open you up to different issues.
This browser extension security check is designed to be fast, repeatable, and realistic. It helps staff make safe decisions in minutes without turning every extension into a big IT ticket.
If you wouldn’t give a random supplier access to your customer records, don’t give a random extension access to your browser.
We suggest you start with the basics:
Treat the store listing as a mini security disclosure. It should clearly explain what the extension does and why it needs access.
What to look for:
Permissions are the whole game. This is where a “helpful tool” can become a high-leverage risk.
Microsoft’s Edge Add-ons policies say extensions “must only request those permissions that are essential for functioning,” and requesting permissions for “future proofing” is “not allowed.”
Here's how to do a fast check:
Extensions aren’t static. They update. And updates can change what the extension can do.
Two things to watch:
You don’t need a committee for every install.
You need a simple decision tree:
Browser extensions aren’t “bad”. Unvetted extensions are the problem.
A simple browser extension security check turns installs from impulse decisions into repeatable standards.
You’re not trying to slow people down. You’re trying to make sure the tools that live inside your browser have a clear purpose, tight permissions, and a vendor you’d actually trust.
Start small. Reduce extension sprawl, treat permission changes as a red flag, and escalate anything that touches sensitive systems.
Then make it easier for staff to do the right thing by default with an approved list and browser-level controls. When installs are standardised, extensions stop being a hidden risk and become just another managed part of the environment.
Contact us at In Motion today to schedule a browser extension audit.
Article used with permission from The Technology Press.