
Firefox is like FreeBSD in that scenario, so in a supposed Linux monopoly, you would be among the crowd demanding more use of FreeBSD. Btw, a Chromium monopoly would be akin to a Linux monopoly… Many distros (browsers) all using the Linux kernel (Chromium base). That is, if the alternative has the very same vision for the web as the thing it is supposedly an alternative to, meaning it is useless. Being a bit disingenuous here, eh? Isn’t that beneath you? Who talks about Chrome… Tom, you have been around here for ages and you know that Chrome isn’t the only Chromium-based browser, it’s just the biggest one in terms of market share. In both cases people are actively being misled. Well, either that, or outright propaganda in favor of your preferred project. I just resent the fact that a simple logical deduction seemingly isn’t possible here. It is still recommended to update Chrome to the latest version as soon as Hawack Google makes no mention of attacks in the wild.

Google does not list security issues that it found internally on the blog. Six of these, all reported by third-party researchers, are mentioned specifically on the blog. The blog post confirms that 11 different security issues are patched in the new Chrome release. Google published an article on the Chrome Releases Blog to inform Chrome users and administrators about the update.
