New Chrome OS 75 Update : Google’s own password manager


With Google’s own password manager, there’s been a pretty solid solution with a place to store your passwords and deploy them when needed. As a matter of fact, across all places you can use Google Chrome you can leverage Google’s password auto-fill regardless of the operating system or device. With that freedom, however, there’s always been a pretty substantial security risk. All the way up to Chrome 74, you’ve been able to navigate to your passwords in the settings of Google Chrome, search for what you are looking for, and then reveal the password in question. Sure, you obviously need to be able to log in to the device to do this in the first place, so there’s a level of security: but it has always felt brittle to me.




New Chrome OS 75 Update Google’s own password manager
Chrome OS 75 Update Google’s own password manager


CHROME 75 SECURES THINGS :-

A change in Chrome 75 has brought a bit of comfort to this whole process with one simple change: viewing passwords now requires your Google Account password every time you open up the settings. It doesn’t matter if or when you logged into the device you are using: if you want to view a password for a site in Chrome 75, you have to know the Google Account password in order to view it.
This small change makes a massive difference if Google is your choice for password management. While it does nothing for auto-filling usernames and passwords on sites if someone already has full access to your device, it does keep them from being able to easily skim your saved passwords and taking that info with them for later use. I’ve utilized Google’s password service for a very long time and always felt a little uneasy about it in general, so this change makes me feel a ton better about keeping my passwords wrapped up in Google’s ecosystem.

Make no mistake, however, as this doesn’t mean you can just leave your device sitting around unlocked and have nothing to worry about. Keep your device locked at all times and never, ever give out the password or PIN for your devices. With any luck, all this sort of info will eventually be hidden behind encrypted, biometric interfaces in the not to distant future. Until that future is upon us, however, every little step helps

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