Google’s Chrome browser might soon get a useful security upgrade: detecting passwords used in data breaches and then generating and storing a better replacement. Google’s preliminary copy suggests it’s an “AI innovation,” though exactly how is unclear.
Noted software digger Leopeva64 on X found a new offering in the AI settings of a very early build of Chrome. The option, “Automated password Change” (so, early stages—as to not yet get a copyedit), is described as, “When Chrome finds one of your passwords in a data breach, it can offer to change your password for you when you sign in.”
Chrome already has a feature that warns users if the passwords they enter have been identified in a breach and will prompt them to change it. As noted by Windows Report, the change is that now Google will offer to change it for you on the spot rather than simply prompting you to handle that elsewhere. The password is automatically saved in Google’s Password Manager and “is encrypted and never seen by anyone,” the settings page claims.
This articles is written by : Nermeen Nabil Khear Abdelmalak
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