Your browser is more than just another app—it's your gateway to the web. We break down the strengths and weaknesses of today's top browsers to help you find the best fit for your needs.
PCWorld reports that Firefox 150 transforms its PDF viewer into a comprehensive editor, allowing users to reorder pages, copy images, and perform various editing functions. Mozilla addressed 41 ...
PCWorld highlights that Mozilla’s Firefox 148 update addresses over 50 security vulnerabilities, including high-risk memory access errors and sandbox escape flaws. The update introduces an AI kill ...
Google Chrome 144 and Firefox 147 patch 26 security flaws, including high-severity bugs and sandbox escapes. Here’s what’s fixed and why updates matter. Grab your virtual wrench, folks… it’s time for ...
The two browser updates resolve 26 security defects, including bugs that could be exploited for code execution. Google and Mozilla on Tuesday announced the release of Chrome 144 and Firefox 147 with ...
It’s likely that Hackaday readers have among them a greater than average number of people who can name one special thing they did on September 23rd, 2002. On that day a new web browser was released, ...
High-severity flaws were patched in Chrome’s WebGPU and Video components, and in Firefox’s Graphics and JavaScript Engine components. Google promoted Chrome 141 to the stable channel with 21 security ...
Emergency updates are coming thick and fast, with Apple recently fixing two flaws being used in attacks and Google issuing critical patches for its widely used Chrome browser. Emergency security ...
Kaspersky recently uncovered a zero-day vulnerability in Google Chrome Mozilla now says it has found a similar issue in Firefox The bug was used to target Russian targets in a cyber-espionage campaign ...
Russian-based RomCom cybercrime group chained two zero-day vulnerabilities in recent attacks targeting Firefox and Tor Browser users across Europe and North America. The first flaw (CVE-2024-9680) is ...
ESET researchers discovered a previously unknown vulnerability in Mozilla products, exploited in the wild by Russia-aligned group RomCom. This is at least the second time that RomCom has been caught ...
A vulnerability disclosed 18 years ago, dubbed "0.0.0.0 Day", allows malicious websites to bypass security in Google Chrome, Mozilla Firefox, and Apple Safari and interact with services on a local ...