Updated
Updated · Fortune · Jul 11
Phia Extension Allegedly Hijacked Sales Credits on 50-Plus Sites, Prompting 24-Hour Fix
Updated
Updated · Fortune · Jul 11

Phia Extension Allegedly Hijacked Sales Credits on 50-Plus Sites, Prompting 24-Hour Fix

3 articles · Updated · Fortune · Jul 11

Summary

  • Bloomberg found Phia’s browser extension was silently inserting its own affiliate code at checkout, potentially taking credit for sales it did not drive in a practice known as cookie stuffing.
  • Tests across more than 50 websites with Capital One Shopping and researcher Ben Edelman showed the tool opened a background tab and overrode legitimate publisher referrals, violating many affiliate-network policies.
  • Within 24 hours of learning of the issue, Phia said a recent code release had caused misattributions for a subset of users and that it had fixed the problem; Bloomberg’s retest found the automatic referral claim had stopped.
  • The allegation hits a fast-growing New York startup launched in 2025 that has logged hundreds of thousands of downloads and reached about a $185 million valuation after raising more than $43 million.

Insights

After its 'cookie stuffing' scandal, can Phia regain user trust and still dominate the AI shopping market?
With Phia's troubles, are browser shopping extensions becoming too risky for the average online shopper to trust?
Is Phoebe Gates truly building a merit-based empire, or is her success still defined by her famous last name?