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Google has patched Chrome zero-day CVE-2025-6558, which is being actively exploited in the wild. Users are urged to update ...
Google addressed an issue in the Chrome browser that affected password management for nearly 15 million Windows users. The problem stemmed from a change in product behavior and lasted for almost ...
Google has released a security update for Chrome to address half a dozen vulnerabilities, one of them actively exploited by ...
Google has released a server-side update for Chrome on Windows and Android devices to fix this problem. Since it’s a server-side update, the users don’t need to do anything.
These security fixes come with the latest release of Google Chrome, version 128. It is slowly rolling out to everyone, along with a security patch for a bug that was fixed last week.
Chrome users need to update their browsers immediately as Google addresses a critical vulnerability that hackers are actively ...
Zero-days are high-severity flaws that are either actively exploited in the wild or publicly disclosed before the developer pushes an update to fix the vulnerability. What the Google Chrome patch ...
In 2024, one zero-day broker was offering up to $3 million for exploitable bugs that can be triggered from over the internet. Google said Chrome updates will roll out over the coming days and weeks.
If Google Chrome is your default browser, it could be the reason that your device is running slower than normal. Luckily, there is a way to fix it. Here's how.