The vulnerability, dubbed Brash, can crash browsers within seconds by flooding the document.title API, and Google’s silence ...
Whether you're on Windows, Linux, macOS, Android, or iOS, you're vulnerable if you use Chrome or any Chromium-based browser.
Brash exploits an architectural flaw in Blink, the rendering engine used by Chromium-based browsers. After testing the PoC on ...
The flaw allows attackers to plant malicious code or commands that the browser might later execute, even without the user's ...
Take a look at the top AI browsers in 2025, their standout features and why they’re redefining productivity and online ...
It's easy to think that the password managers your web browser recommends you to use are secure enough, but it's not as simple as you might imagine.
AI browsers from AI companies promise to revolutionise your work, but it could also endanger you, Satyen K. Bordoloi warns.
The 'Brash' flaw not only affects all Chromium-based browsers and works by bombarding a little-known function.
Each of these browsers has a different take on what it means to integrate — or build a browser around — generative AI, but a ...
Browser-based password managers offer convenience with strong encryption, but they can put all your logins at risk if your ...
The vulnerability works on Google Chrome and all web browsers that run on Chromium, which includes Microsoft Edge, Brave, ...
These browsers all promise to automate away the mundane aspects of navigating the internet, and there are moments—like when ...