9 Critical Security Flaws Exploited by Hackers
So far this year, Google has already corrected 9 critical security flaws in its browser, zero-day flaws that were also being exploited by hackers. The first of them arrived in February of this year as a bug that allowed code to be executed in the browser’s memory. From there, the following months have not gone any better, with similar failures appearing in March, April, July, August and October.
The last zero-day bug reached us last week, specifically on November 25: CVE-2022-4135. This buffer overflow flaw in GPU processes allowed hackers full access to the PC’s memory and to be able to execute remote code on the PC.
For security reasons, at the moment Google has not provided technical data on the vulnerability to prevent massive attacks on a large scale, although, as on other occasions, it will do so when most users of their browsers have updated.
Update Chrome NOW
This security flaw affects all users who have this browser installed on their PC, even those who, last week, have installed the version 108 of the same. For this reason, it is vitally important to make sure that we have our browser up to date, with this security patch, to avoid being at the mercy of hackers.
To do this, what we have to do is open the browser menu, and go to the Help > Information section of Google Chrome. There we will see the version of the browser that we have installed. If this is equal to, or greater than, 108.0.5359.95, then we are safe.
On the contrary, if it is older, the browser will automatically search for new versions, download and install them so that, after restarting the browser, we can already be up to date.