Google Chrome Extensions such as uBlock Origin are switched off as the browser firm enforces security updates.
If you’re a Chrome user you’re being tracked. We hoped it would be less invasive by now with the death of tracking cookies. But it isn’t. In fact it’s worse with the surprise revival of digital fingerprinting,
It looks like Google is preparing to roll out Chrome's AI-powered history search feature outside the United States.
Perplexity AI, led by Aravind Srinivas, is set to launch a new browser named Comet, aimed at providing an agentic search experience. While a teaser has been released, details about its features and release date remain unclear amid Google’s market dominance.
Called SecTopRAT, the malware hides inside a malicious ad that purports to be an installer for Google Chrome. However, anyone who clicks on the ad is instead funneled to a fake Google website designed to cleverly mimic the legitimate page.
It would not be wrong to say that Google always keeps tracking your activities and shows you ads accordingly. However, people also get annoyed by getting such ad recommendations again and again and they want such ads should not be shown to them.
Google is rolling out new search gestures that allow iPhone users to highlight anything on their screen to quickly search for it. The Lens screen-searching feature is available on iOS in both the Google app and Chrome browser and provides a similar experience to Android’s Circle to Search, which isn’t supported on iPhones.
Google continues its rollout of gradually disabling uBlock Origin and other Manifest V2-based extensions in the Chrome web browser as part of its efforts to push users to Manifest V3-based extensions.
Google Chrome OS 133 adds several minor new features related to accessibility, screencasts, Bluetooth microphones, and more.
Google Chrome has updated the existing "Enhanced protection" feature with AI to offer "real-time" protection against dangerous websites, downloads and extensions.
AI start-up Perplexity is building an agentic browser that could possibly disrupt Google’s search dominance. Other than calling the browser Comet, CEO Aravind Srinivas did not share any specific details about the browser.
This news about Google Cloud Key Management Service is part of the tech giant’s post-quantum computing strategy.