Google Clarifies ChromeOS/Android Merger
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Google Chrome Is Saying Goodbye To More Old MacsGoogle Chrome is ending support for macOS Big Sur in version 139. Users with older Macs may lose Chrome support & face security risks. Chrome 138 will still work, but you'll get no new features or security patches. Apple's yearly releases mean that older ...
Google has confirmed that its upcoming Chrome 138 browser update will be the last version to support macOS Big Sur. Going forward, Chrome 139
Chrome 138 is the current version of Google's web browser. It's the last version Google will support for Macs running this version of macOS.
Google just announced that Chrome 138 is the last version of the browser that officially supports 2020's macOS Big Sur.
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Macworld on MSNGoogle Chrome ends support for macOS Big SurGoogle has announced that version 138 of its Chrome browser for Mac is the last version that can run on macOS 11 Big Sur. According to a support document, Big Sur is “outside of its support window with Apple,” and that “running on a supported operating system is essential to maintaining security.”
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Google has resolved a total of five zero-day vulnerabilities in Chrome that have been either actively exploited or demonstrated as a proof-of-concept (PoC) since the start of the year. This includes: CVE-2025-2783, CVE-2025-4664, CVE-2025-5419, and CVE-2025-6554.
Google has released a security update for Chrome to address half a dozen vulnerabilities, one of them actively exploited by attackers to escape the browser's sandbox protection.
Google has released a Chrome 138 security update that patches a zero-day, the fifth resolved in the browser this year.
Now, to add to the Chrome pain, some more glitches have been discovered in this web-surfing software with one being given the dreaded zero-day tag. For those not aware, that basically means it has already been spotted by online crooks and is being used in the wild to attack unsuspecting users.