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World Wide Web

Google Rolls Out Chrome 17 Browser with 'Pre-Rendered' Pages

Google Rolls Out Chrome 17 Browser with
February 9, 2012 12:16PM

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Google's Chrome 17 includes expanded functionality for analyzing the content of downloadable ".exe" and ".msi executable files. "If a file you download is known to be bad...Chrome will warn you that the file appears to be malicious and that you should discard it," wrote Chrome software engineer Dominic Hamon in a blog.

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Google rolled out a stable release of Chrome 17 to browser users around the world Wednesday. Among other things, the upgrade begins to pre-render Web site pages based on what the user is typing in the browser's address bar, which Google has renamed the "omnibox."

"When you start typing in the omnibox and the URL auto-completes to a site you're very likely to visit, Chrome will pre-render the page, so it will appear faster -- sometimes, even instantly -- as soon as you hit Enter," wrote Chrome Software Engineer NoƩ Lutz in a company blog Wednesday.

Chrome 17 also features a number of security enhancements, including greater protection from malicious downloads, some of which even masquerade as free anti-virus products.

Google hopes the speed and security improvements to Chrome 17 -- together with this week's launch of Chrome as a browser for mobile Relevant Products/Services devices running Android Relevant Products/Services 4 -- will help the browser resume its former growth trajectory in the global browser market.

According to Net Applications, Google's browser market growth stalled in January when Chrome lost 0.17 percent share on the desktop -- even as Microsoft Relevant Products/Services's Internet Explorer gained 1.1 percent and Mozilla's Firefox dropped 1 percent.

Security Enhancements

Chrome 17 analyzes the properties of each Web site that users visit to determine the likelihood of it containing phishing pages. Moreover, this analysis is conducted in the background on the user's own PC Relevant Products/Services and without any information about the Web sites that users visit being shared with Google.

"Only if the page looks sufficiently suspicious will Chrome send the URL of that page back to Google for further analysis, and show a warning as appropriate," noted Chrome software Relevant Products/Services engineer Niels Provos and product manager Ian Fette.

The safe browsing functionality built into Chrome 17 downloads a continuously-updated list of known phishing and malware Web sites, generated by an automated analysis of Google's entire Web index. "If Chrome detects that you've visited a page on the list, it warns you with a large red page that helps you get back to safety," Provos and Fette wrote in a blog.

Chrome 17 also includes expanded functionality for analyzing the content of downloadable ".exe" and ".msi executable files. "If a file you download is known to be bad, or is hosted on a Web site that hosts a relatively high percentage of malicious downloads, Chrome will warn you that the file appears to be malicious and that you should discard it," wrote Chrome software engineer Dominic Hamon in a blog. (continued...)

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Based on your interest in this article, here's something that may be of interest to you also:

Recommended Reading: Search & Destroy: Why You Can't Trust Google Inc. Synopsis: This is the other side of the Google story. In Search & Destroy, Google expert Scott Cleland, shows that the world's most powerful company is not who it pretends to be. Google pretends to be a harmless lamb, but chose a full-size model of a Tyrannosaurus Rex as its mascot. Beware the T-Rex in sheep's clothing.

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Kathryn:

Posted: 2012-02-09 @ 3:16pm PT
I don't understand what you're changing.

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