Even Knowing Each Of The Top 24 Tips For Dealing With Google, You Might Miss This when viewing passwords in chrome browserto display them and thus correct any errors during typing, they are sent to the servers of the big G. A confidentiality flaw that was discovered very recently.
[El nuevo botón de Chrome es lo más útil que ha llegado al navegador en mucho tiempo]
A Chrome feature that sends passwords without your knowledge
Google’s Chrome has a special feature, via Android Police, called ‘improved spell checker’. In fact, when the browser itself is activated, it communicates that anything you type in the browser will be sent to Google’s servers for grammar and style checking.
We note that a you need to make sure you don’t enable it where there may be data security issues, and research has now confirmed this, so that under certain circumstances your username and password may be sent to Google’s servers during the login process .
otto-js, via Bleeping Computer, discovered that passwords you enter under a hidden login mask could be sent to Google’s servers when using the “show password” feature.
Don’t copy passwords if you’re using a cloud clipboard
You can see this feature on many websites to make it easier to fill in the connection or session, and the truth is that it is very comfortable, but unless the page the website we are visiting includes an attribute in HTML called ‘spellcheck=false’, this very private data could be transmitted to a Google server.
As far as Google is concerned, it specifies that this text, being a password, is not tied to a user’s identity and it is only temporarily stored on servers, so if you normally use the enhanced grammar checker feature, you should always keep in mind not to enter passwords in Chrome.
It also affects cloud clipboard tools that by synchronizing what was copied across different devices, it could display the password in places where one would not want it to be seen, such as in a company.
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