Google says it will no longer trust root CA certificates signed by Chunghwa Telecom and Netlock in the Chrome Root Store due to a pattern of compliance failures and failure to make improvements. The ...
Upcoming changes in Google Chrome and Mozilla Firefox may finally spark the end for Extended Validation certificates as the browsers plan to do away with showing a company's name in the address bar.
An announcement from the Google Chrome Security Team has dropped what can only be described as a security and privacy bombshell for the 3.45 billion users of the Chrome browser. From November 1, the ...
A Certification Authority (CA) issues certificates that help guarantee you’re visiting a legitimate website. Over the years, Chrome has had to distrust some CAs, and the Google browser is about to do ...
The Google Chrome browser will no longer trust by default digitial certificates from Chunghwa Telecom and Netlock in an effort to "safeguard Chrome's users" over what the company said is a loss of ...
Daniel writes guides on how to use the internet, explainers on how modern technology works, and the occasional smartwatch or e-reader review. He especially likes deep diving into niche topics that ...
Good on Google for revoking their permissions. Each of those specific incidents is a major security concern. That pie chart makes it challenging to determine what the most prevalent problems are. Is ...
Starting this November 1st, Google Chrome will stop trusting websites that use security certificates from a company called Entrust. This is a big deal because Entrust is a very popular company that ...
The Chrome security team at Google has confirmed that a major change to how the browser prioritizes the security and privacy of its 3.4 billion users is coming a little later than originally planned.