PayPal’s Honey browser extension has been lauded for years as an easy way to find coupons online. But some are calling it a ...
Creators have filed two class-action lawsuits against PayPal over the affiliate practices of its Honey browser extension.
A popular YouTube creator is accusing PayPal of defrauding influencers and online shoppers though its coupon service Honey.
A popular YouTuber accused internet browser extension Honey, known for finding coupons, of "exploiting" last-click ...
The PayPal-owned Honey browser extension was recently caught deceiving customers and poaching affiliate revenue from creators. Lawyer Devin Stone has filed a class action lawsuit against PayPal ...
In the the 23-minute video by user MegaLag, the PayPal property is accused of abusing the affiliate link system for its own profit.
After rebounding to 18M users post-scandal, Honey vanishes, reflecting cancel culture’s impact on corporate ethics.
The lawsuit follows similar cases in which influencers sued PayPal's Honey. Both Capital One and PayPal deny the allegations.
Honey is a popular extension for web browsers that claims to scour the web for coupon codes, helping people find the best deals when shopping online. The extension also operates a reward points ...
Despite heavy criticism of the function of the "Honey" browser extension, it is still supplied with the Paypal app – without any information.
The claim accuses PayPal of replacing affiliate links indicating that the content creators drove traffic to purchases with links crediting Honey, a browser extension owned by PayPal that applies ...