@KirstenThomson
Thank you so much for raising this concern and bringing it to the Community’s attention.
@KCTesterman made sure our internal teams looked into this extension. While we can’t take direct action on the extension itself, we did want to confirm [for you and others] that Canvas has not been compromised. The team verified that the extension doesn’t have access to Canvas quiz data; instead, it pulls visible content from the page and performs a quick web search to suggest an answer based on what’s commonly found online.
To be sure, our engineers reviewed the extension’s behavior and tested it by creating a quiz question like “What is your favorite color?” with the correct answer set to “persimmon.” The extension suggested “blue” based on internet results, highlighting that it's simply using surface-level search logic rather than accessing any Canvas answer keys or protected data. In short: it’s essentially an automated copy-paste into a search engine or AI tool.
Switching to New Quizzes can help prevent this specific extension from functioning, though it’s always possible new tools may emerge. This is another great reminder of the value of authentic assessment strategies to help minimize opportunities for academic dishonesty.
Thanks again for being part of this important conversation!