Threat actors now have the ability to exploit a new zero-day vulnerability in the Chrome browser, Google has advised IT ...
High-severity CSS flaw let malicious webpages run code inside the sandbox Google has quietly pushed out an emergency Chrome fix after attackers were caught exploiting the browser's first reported zero ...
If you have disabled automatic updates, make sure to open Chrome, click the three dots in the top-right corner, and navigate ...
Google fixes actively exploited Chrome zero-day CVE-2026-2441, a high-severity CSS use-after-free flaw enabling sandboxed remote code execution.
More than 35 years after the first website went online, the web has evolved from static pages to complex interactive systems, ...
CERT-In has issued a critical security advisory for Google Chrome users, highlighting a "High" severity vulnerability, CVE-2026-2441. This flaw allows remote attackers to execute malicious code simply ...
Google Chrome patched a high-severity zero-day exploited in the wild, affecting Windows, macOS, and Linux users. Update to latest version now.
Google and Microsoft's new WebMCP standard lets websites expose callable tools to AI agents through the browser — replacing costly scraping with structured function calls.
Google has released urgent security updates for Chrome to patch a high-severity use-after-free vulnerability in CSS, actively ...
While AI coding assistants dramatically lower the barrier to building software, the true shift lies in the move toward "disposable code", ...
Google confirmed that attackers are actively exploiting the flaw in the wild, making it an actual threat rather than a theoretical one.