Malicious Chrome extensions tied to ownership transfers push malware and steal data, exposing thousands to credential theft and system compromise.
Google has rushed out a Chrome 146 security update that patches two zero-day vulnerabilities exploited in the wild.
Many Chrome extensions start as small developer projects, and once they gain users, are sold on. But what if the new owner turns out to be a bad actor who gains the ability to update software running ...
ActiveX is a Microsoft software framework that enables applications to share data across web browsers, enhancing functionality and security in computing.
It was a solid addition to my LLM-powered app stack ...
As web browsers evolve into AI-powered workspaces, they are gaining deeper access to system resources. Integrated assistants can summarize content, automate tasks and interact directly with local ...
Researchers at Palo Alto Networks' Unit 42 found a high-severity flaw in Chrome's Gemini AI panel that could have let rogue ...
Researchers discovered a high-severity vulnerability in the Chrome browser affecting the Gemini AI feature. Malicious extensions could exploit it to spy on users or steal data. Google has released a ...
Chrome on Android still lacks extension support, despite other browsers offering this feature.
Millions installed 'productivity' Chrome extensions that became malware after acquisition. Here's how browser extensions became enterprise security's weakest link.
Two days after releasing Chrome 146, Google's unscheduled update addresses two security flaws that are already being exploited in the wild.
Google patches two actively exploited Chrome vulnerabilities that could allow attackers to crash browsers or run malicious code. Billions of users urged to update.