News

The Linux Foundation announced the launch, along with a hundred top tech companies, of the Agent2Agent (A2A) project, an open ...
Google has patched a serious flaw affecting Google Chrome The vulnerability was actively exploited by attackers Google says a ...
In a new security bulletin, Google said it addressed a type confusion issue in Chrome V8, tracked as CVE-2025-6554, which allowed threat actors to perform arbitrary read/write operations, potentially ...
An actively exploited type confusion vulnerability in the Google Chrome web browser needs immediate attention from users ...
The U.S. Department of Justice is preparing to impose massive penalties on Google for monopolistic behavior and has proposed a forced sale of Chrome as a likely remedy.
A newly uncovered zero-day vulnerability which affects both Windows and Linux systems could put billions of Google Chrome and Chromium users at serious risk of data theft, experts have warned.
Here's what's in the cards. First, Google may end up selling Chrome. Chrome is worth serious money. It's easily the most popular web browser. The best market numbers for browsers, I've found, are ...
The Justice Department has asked that Google be forced to sell its Chrome browser and share some of the data it collects to create its search results. It has also asked Mehta to ban Google from paying ...
Chromium was created by Google, but accepts technical contributions from other companies and has support from Meta Platforms Inc., Microsoft Corp. and the Linux Foundation, among others.
Google Cloud has donated its Agent2Agent (A2A) protocol to the Linux Foundation, which has now announced a new community-driven project called the Agent2Agent Project.
Google is teaming up with the Linux Foundation, Microsoft, Meta, and Opera to form a new Supporters of Chromium-Based Browsers group. Members of the group, managed by the Linux Foundation, will work ...