Sentences with phrase «chromium blog»

The Chromium Blog confirms that mining scripts consume significant CPU resources and impact system performance and power consumption.
According to Google's Chromium Blog, Google has decided to ban all crypto mining extensions from its chrome store on April 2, 2018.
On the Chromium blog, Google just announced that they have split off WebKit to create and further develop the open source Blink rendering engine.
Indeed, in a Chromium blog post written by James Wagner (Extensions Platform Product Manager) on Monday, he revealed that the «Chrome Web Store will no longer accept extensions that mine cryptocurrency.»
Mining James Wagner, Extensions Platform Product Manager of Google, took to the behemoth's Chromium Blog on Monday in a post titled, Protecting Users from Extension Cryptojacking.
As outlined on the Chromium Blog, Chrome 64 will tweak Google's autoplay rules and restrict autoplay videos unless they play without sound or users have expressed an interest in that website's content in the past.
Chrome will now only play videos if the sound doesn't play by default, if the user clicks or interacts with the site or has «shown an interest in media on the site,» according to the company's Chromium blog.
The announcement was published on the Chromium blog by James Wagner, Google's extensions platform product manager.
Chrome 66.0.3359.66 contains our usual under - the - hood performance and stability tweaks, but there are also some cool new features to explore - please head to the Chromium blog to learn more!
In a post on the Chromium blog, Google pointed out that the majority of its users on Windows 7 have PC systems that are already...
A post on Google's Chromium blog today makes it clear: The search giant won't allow any new cryptocurrency mining extensions on its browser's web store, and those already on it will soon get the boot.
Here's James Wagner, Extensions Platform Product Manager, writing for the official Chromium Blog:

Not exact matches

A security alert from the Mist team published today on the Ethereum blog highlights how security update discrepancies across Mist, its underlying platform Electron, and the Chromium browser could compromise data privacy.
We contacted Google about this recurring problem, and a Google spokeswoman pointed us to a recent posting on the official Chromium developer blog regarding a phony AdBlock Plus extension.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z