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It’s 2019’s first browser update week with both Google and Mozilla tidying up security features and patching vulnerabilities in Chrome and Firefox for Mac, Windows, and Linux.
But for Chrome security in version 72, it’s more about what’s being taken out than what’s being added.
One of these changes is the deprecation of support for obsolete TLS 1.0 and 1.1 protocols with a view to removing support completely by Chrome 81, scheduled for early next year (the same will apply to Firefox, Microsoft Edge and Apple’s Safari). This will affect developers rather than users who will still be able to connect to the tiny number of sites using TLS 1.0/1.1 for another year.
However, one standard that is completely banished in Chrome 72 is HTTP-Based Public Key Pinning (HPKP), deprecated from version 67 last May.
An IETF security standard designed to counter digital certificate impersonation, HPKP’s problem wasn’t obsolescence so much as doubts about the unintended problems it could cause. Consequently, uptake was low.
Also on the slippery slope is FTP, which Google considers to be a legacy protocol that it’s time to migrate away from. The latest version will only render directory listings, downloading anything else.
An interesting tweak is the integration of WebAuthn APIs to allow users to authenticate using FIDO U2F keys and Windows Hello. Although still not defaults – and no major websites offer WebAuthn in anything other than a test state – it’s a necessary stage for enabling this by default in a future release.
Security fixes
Chrome 72 fixes 58 CVE-level flaws, including 17 rated ‘high’ severity and one ‘critical’, identified as CVE-2019-5754 and described simply as an “inappropriate implementation in QUIC Networking.”
Continuing its six-week schedule, the next version, Chrome 73, is due out on 12 March, with version 74 appearing on 23 April.
Part of this update will see Chrome warn users when they visit lookalike URLs meant to resemble popular websites.
Firefox 65
Naked Security has already covered the new content blocking setting added to Firefox 65, but this also patches seven CVEs, including three marked ‘critical’ and two ‘high’.
The criticals include CVE-2018-18500 (reported by SophosLabs’ researcher Yaniv Frank), described as:
A use-after-free vulnerability that can occur while parsing an HTML5 stream in concert with custom HTML elements.
Also fixed are CVE-2018-18501 and CVE-2018-18502, both memory safety flaws plus CVE-2018-18504, a memory corruption issue, and CVE-2018-18505, a privilege escalation affecting Inter-process Communication (IPC) authentication.
Continuing the memory theme, Linux, macOS and Android versions get protection against ‘stack smashing’, which attackers can use to take control of a browser process.
Many people are happy to stick with the default browser set up when they fire up their computer for the first time, which means Edge if you’re a Windows 10 user and Safari if you’re on an Apple Mac. Both browsers have improved massively in recent years, but part of that improvement is down to the growth in rival browsers like Google’s open-source alternative.
Chrome is no longer the young upstart it once was, and its pioneering spirit is often forgotten in the mists of time. It was Chrome’s sleek tab-driven interface with minimal real estate that was adopted by Firefox and then Internet Explorer. Chrome was the first to provide a resource-friendly browser that loaded quickly and didn’t suck the life out of your system, although again the competition has now caught up – and in some cases – surpassed its achievements.
Dowmload messenger lite for e15i. Oh, Chrome was also the first to adopt a rapid release cycle, so if you’re fed up with a new browser number appearing in the About menu every few months, you can thank Google for that too.
Chrome may no longer look like the dazzling young starlet, but it more than holds its own against the competition. It’s still quick to load, quick to perform and easy to use. It bundles the Flash plug-in so you don’t have to download it separately and the browser sync function makes it easy to back up and sync your settings across multiple computers.
While the competition has definitely caught up, Chrome has enough going for it to keep existing users happy supporting the browser that has led to so many improvements in the way we view and access the web.
Chrome Portable 80 is now in the Stable channel. This is the 64-bit version of Chrome Portable.
It’s not quite the pioneer it was, but Chrome continues to evolve interesting new features and performance tweaks to make it a decent alternative to your existing browser.
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