Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. Phones
  4. News

Chrome browser is getting a security boost that you won’t see, but it’s good to have

Google's DBSC update closes one of the most exploited gaps in browser security.

Add as a preferred source on Google
A MacBook with Google Chrome loaded.
Firmbee / Unsplash

Google has quietly shipped one of the more meaningful browser security updates, and chances are you’ll never notice it’s there, which, I think, is the entire point. 

Device Bound Session Credentials, or DBSC, is now available in Chrome on Windows for all Google Workspace users, including Individual subscribers and users with personal accounts. The feature is enabled by default, so that you don’t have to fiddle with any settings. 

What is DBSC and why does it matter?

Every time you log into a website, your browser stores a small file called a session cookie for subsequent visits, so you don’t have to provide your credentials every time you load a new page. 

Recommended Videos

The problem, however, is that if your device is affected by any type of malware, it can steal those cookies and send them to an attacker, who can then use them to access your accounts, without ever needing your password. They can even bypass two-factor authentication.

This type of attack is more common than most people realize, and the sad part is that it works even on accounts with relatively stronger security settings. The good news is that DBSC addresses this by tying the session cookie to the specific device the browser created it on. 

An added security layer in the background

So, even if malware copies the session details or cookie and passes it along to someone else, the information becomes unusable outside the device it was created on. The added security layer works silently in the background as you continue going about your day on Chrome. 

DBSC, in my opinion, is a part of a broader industry push to phase out traditional session cookies entirely. The World Wide Web Consortium already has an open specification for this that has existed for about three years now, and Microsoft has been quietly equipping Edge with the same standard.

Shikhar Mehrotra
For more than five years, Shikhar has consistently simplified developments in the field of consumer tech and presented them…
How to change the default apps on a Mac
Apple's default apps are great, until they're not. Here's how to swap them out in seconds.
change default apps on Mac featured image

One of my favorite things about macOS is that it comes with default apps to handle your everyday tasks. You get Safari to browse the web, the Mail app to handle your emails, and the Preview app to open and view photos and PDFs.

But what if you want to use a third-party app you prefer over the default app? Thankfully, Apple makes it easy to change the default apps on your Mac. So, whether you want to use Google Chrome or Outlook, here’s how you can set them as the default on your Mac. 

Read more
You can now choose how hard Claude thinks before answering your queries
For the first time, Claude users can decide whether their AI assistant thinks fast or thinks deep.
Page, Text, Business Card

Anthropic just released Claude Opus 4.8, and while the benchmark improvements are quite real, the most meaningful change for everyday users is something far simpler. 

You can now tell Claude how hard to think before it responds to your query. Along with that, dynamic workflows are now available in research preview for Enterprise, Team, and Max plan users. 

Read more
Copilot gets a redesign and it now wants to do more without being an eyesore
Microslop Microsoft AI Copilot logo

Microsoft is giving Copilot a quiet but meaningful redesign, and this time the focus is not just on making it more powerful. It is about making it feel like something that naturally belongs in your workflow.

Across Microsoft 365, Copilot is being reshaped to reduce visual noise and increase usefulness. Instead of constantly demanding attention, it is being designed to sit in the background when needed and step forward only when it actually helps. That shift might sound subtle, but in day-to-day work, it changes how often you feel interrupted versus supported.

Read more