Google Chrome. SERIOUS PROBLEM Repaired by Google Reappeared

Google Chrome. This serious browser problem, reported as fixed by Google, has reappeared and is as bad as it was before.

Google Chrome. SERIOUS PROBLEM Fixed Google Reappeared

Google Chrome. A very serious problem that the Google company has known for a long time, and which it says it has solved in the latest version of the browser, which will be released in the following days, is not really solved. Google Chrome announced that it had solved a very serious problem due to which users browsing the module Incognito they could be detected by websites, so they weren't protected as well as they thought.

Google Chrome. The detection was based on the way data was stored in computers when this function was used, and although Google claims to have solved it, in reality it seems that this is not true. A researcher in computer security claims that he managed to discover a method by which the module Incognito of Google Chrome can be detected again by website owners when users access their websites.

Google Chrome. SERIOUS PROBLEM Repaired by Google Reappeared

Google Chrome. SERIOUS PROBLEM Repaired by Google Incognito mode reappears

Google Chrome. The discovery was also made after analyzing the way in which the browser stores information in the RAM memory, a maximum allocation being imposed for those who surf the Internet. More precisely, when Google Chrome is used in Incognito Mode, only 120 MB of the amount of RAM memory of a computer can be used by the browser, and so those who own websites can figure out how it is accessed by the user.

Google Chrome. The expert also created a web code that allows any website developers to quickly check if the browser is allocating more than 120 MB of RAM, and if this is true, then it is not in Inconito Fashion. Detection is not difficult, and thus Google Chrome has a broken solution even before it is launched by the Google company, which means that everything must be rethought.

Google Chrome. The solution to this problem was presented by Google as a necessity to provide privacy to those who surf the Internet, but it seems that we have no part of it.