Your browser sends a lot of information with each website you visit. That can be used to track you across the internet.
Cryptopolitan on MSN
Chrome will auto-mute noisy site notifications you ignore
Google is rolling out a new feature to its web browser, Chrome, that will auto-mute notifications from websites that users do ...
Go to Chrome’s settings. Then go to Privacy and Security > Site settings → Notifications. Alternatively, visit the Safety ...
Google launches AI Mode in Chrome’s side panel for Lens searches. This allows users to ask follow-up questions without ...
Chrome’s Canary build quietly adds a “Contextual tasks” panel tied to Gemini. It's rough, but it points to agentic browsing, ...
Many organizations lack complete visibility into all JavaScript code executing on their pages. Scripts can dynamically load ...
Chrome will automatically remove notification permissions from sites you haven’t interacted with recently, but only when there’s a high volume of notifications being sent.
The search giant's latest move lets people collapse sponsored results, with a catch that still guarantees exposure for ...
cleanfleetreport.co on MSN
Stellantis to Phase Out Chrome on New Vehicles, Citing Health and Environmental Risks in a Strategic Shift to Sustainable Aesthetics
The automotive world is entering a revolutionary stage where Stellantis, the holding company of some of the most widely ...
Every major browser pushes password-saving prompts nearly every time you log into a site. You can turn them off (or swap them ...
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