The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) has urged all its users to apply the necessary security patches and update their Chrome browser to mitigate these risks.

New Delhi: India’s cybersecurity watchdog CERT-In has reported two vulnerabilities in the Google Chrome browser. CERT-In, which comes under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology, has said these vulnerabilities can allow attackers to compromise user data and devices, highlighting the importance of updating to the latest version of the browser, according to The Times of India (TOI) report.

The Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) has urged all its users to apply the necessary security patches and update their Chrome browser to mitigate these risks. It is important to note that these users include Mac, PC, and laptop platforms and not that much for smartphone users.

According to CERT-In’s website, Google Chrome is currently facing — CIVN-2025-0007 and CIVN-2025-0008 — vulnerabilities which have a severity rating of critical and high, respectively. The first vulnerability affects Google Chrome versions before 132.0.6834.83/8r (in Windows/ Mac) while the other one targets Google Chrome versions before 132.0.6834.110/111 for Windows and Macs as well as versions before 132.0.6834.110 for Linux.

CERT-In reported that multiple vulnerabilities have been identified in Google Chrome, stemming from issues such as out-of-bounds memory access in V8, improper implementation in navigation, fullscreen, fenced frames, payments, extensions, and compositing. Additional flaws include an integer overflow in Skia, out-of-bounds read in metrics, stack buffer overflow in Tracing, race conditions in Frames, and insufficient data validation in Extensions.




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