CINXE.COM
Chromium Blog
<!DOCTYPE html> <html class='v2 list-page' dir='ltr' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/Blog' lang='en' xmlns='http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml' xmlns:b='http://www.google.com/2005/gml/b' xmlns:data='http://www.google.com/2005/gml/data' xmlns:expr='http://www.google.com/2005/gml/expr'> <head> <link href='https://www.blogger.com/static/v1/widgets/3566091532-css_bundle_v2.css' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'/> <title> Chromium Blog </title> <meta content='width=device-width, height=device-height, initial-scale=1.0' name='viewport'/> <meta content='IE=Edge' http-equiv='X-UA-Compatible'/> <meta content='Chromium Blog' property='og:title'/> <meta content='en_US' property='og:locale'/> <meta content='https://blog.chromium.org/' property='og:url'/> <meta content='Chromium Blog' property='og:site_name'/> <!-- Twitter Card properties --> <meta content='Chromium Blog' property='og:title'/> <meta content='summary' name='twitter:card'/> <meta content='@ChromiumDev' name='twitter:creator'/> <link href='https://fonts.googleapis.com/css?family=Roboto:400italic,400,500,500italic,700,700italic' rel='stylesheet' type='text/css'/> <link href='https://fonts.googleapis.com/icon?family=Material+Icons' rel='stylesheet'/> <script src='https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.3/jquery.min.js' type='text/javascript'></script> <!-- End --> <style id='page-skin-1' type='text/css'><!-- /* <Group description="Header Color" selector="header"> <Variable name="header.background.color" description="Header Background" type="color" default="#ffffff"/> </Group> */ .header-outer { border-bottom: 1px solid #e0e0e0; 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margin-top: 1em 0 0 0; padding: 0.99em; overflow-x: auto; overflow-y: auto; } pre, code { font-size: 9pt; background-color: #fafafa; line-height: 125%; font-family: monospace; } pre, code { color: #060; font: 13px/1.54 "courier new",courier,monospace; } .header-left .header-logo1 { width: 128px !important; } .header-desc { line-height: 20px; margin-top: 8px; } .fb-custom img, .twitter-custom img, .gplus-share img { cursor: pointer; opacity: 0.54; } .fb-custom img:hover, .twitter-custom img:hover, .gplus-share img:hover { opacity: 0.87; } .fb-like { width: 80px; } .post .share { float: right; } #twitter-share{ border: #CCC solid 1px; border-radius: 3px; background-image: -webkit-linear-gradient(top,#ffffff,#dedede); } .twitter-follow { background: url(https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEimKBWDeRb1pqsbNiP9AFLyFDZHzXGYEJZRELMrZ6iI0yz4KeMPH_7tPsrMq9PpJ3H6riC_UohpWMn83_Z1N2sTuTTrVL7i6TrNzpO9oFg4e8VFK4zFJb1rfamWfc8RxG8Fhz2RgRgHN10u/s1600/twitter-bird.png) no-repeat left center; padding-left: 18px; font: normal normal normal 11px/18px 'Helvetica Neue',Arial,sans-serif; font-weight: bold; text-shadow: 0 1px 0 rgba(255,255,255,.5); cursor: pointer; margin-bottom: 10px; } .twitter-fb { padding-top: 2px; } .fb-follow-button { background: -webkit-linear-gradient(#4c69ba, #3b55a0); background: -moz-linear-gradient(#4c69ba, #3b55a0); background: linear-gradient(#4c69ba, #3b55a0); border-radius: 2px; height: 18px; padding: 4px 0 0 3px; width: 57px; border: #4c69ba solid 1px; } .fb-follow-button a { text-decoration: none !important; text-shadow: 0 -1px 0 #354c8c; text-align: center; white-space: nowrap; font-size: 11px; color: white; vertical-align: top; } .fb-follow-button a:visited { color: white; } .fb-follow { padding: 0px 5px 3px 0px; width: 14px; vertical-align: bottom; } .gplus-wrapper { margin-top: 3px; display: inline-block; vertical-align: top; } .twitter-custom, .gplus-share { margin-right: 12px; } .fb-follow-button{ margin: 10px auto; } /** CUSTOM CODE **/ --></style> <style id='template-skin-1' type='text/css'><!-- .header-outer { clear: both; } .header-inner { margin: auto; padding: 0px; } .footer-outer { background: #f5f5f5; clear: both; margin: 0; } .footer-inner { margin: auto; padding: 0px; } .footer-inner-2 { /* Account for right hand column elasticity. */ max-width: calc(100% - 248px); } .google-footer-outer { clear: both; } .cols-wrapper, .google-footer-outer, .footer-inner, .header-inner { max-width: 978px; margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; } .cols-wrapper { margin: auto; clear: both; margin-top: 60px; margin-bottom: 60px; overflow: hidden; } .col-main-wrapper { float: left; width: 100%; } .col-main { margin-right: 278px; max-width: 660px; } .col-right { float: right; width: 248px; margin-left: -278px; } /* Tweaks for layout mode. */ body#layout .google-footer-outer { display: none; } body#layout .header-outer, body#layout .footer-outer { background: none; } body#layout .header-inner { height: initial; } body#layout .cols-wrapper { margin-top: initial; margin-bottom: initial; } --></style> <!-- start all head --> <meta content='text/html; charset=UTF-8' http-equiv='Content-Type'/> <meta content='blogger' name='generator'/> <link href='https://blog.chromium.org/favicon.ico' rel='icon' type='image/x-icon'/> <link href='https://blog.chromium.org/' rel='canonical'/> <link rel="alternate" type="application/atom+xml" title="Chromium Blog - Atom" href="https://blog.chromium.org/feeds/posts/default" /> <link rel="alternate" type="application/rss+xml" title="Chromium Blog - RSS" href="https://blog.chromium.org/feeds/posts/default?alt=rss" /> <link rel="service.post" type="application/atom+xml" title="Chromium Blog - Atom" href="https://www.blogger.com/feeds/2471378914199150966/posts/default" /> <!--Can't find substitution for tag [blog.ieCssRetrofitLinks]--> <meta content='https://blog.chromium.org/' property='og:url'/> <meta content='Chromium Blog' property='og:title'/> <meta content='News and developments from the open source browser project' property='og:description'/> <!-- end all head --> <base target='_self'/> <style> html { font-family: Roboto, sans-serif; -moz-osx-font-smoothing: grayscale; -webkit-font-smoothing: antialiased; } body { padding: 0; /* This ensures that the scroll bar is always present, which is needed */ /* because content render happens after page load; otherwise the header */ /* would "bounce" in-between states. */ min-height: 150%; } h2 { font-size: 16px; } h1, h2, h3, h4, h5 { line-height: 2em; } html, h4, h5, h6 { font-size: 14px; } a, a:visited { /* Ensures links meet minimum contrast ratios. */ color: #3974d6; text-decoration: none; } a:focus, a:hover, a:active { text-decoration: none; } .Header { margin-top: 15px; } .Header h1 { font-size: 32px; font-weight: 300; line-height: 32px; height: 42px; } .header-inner .Header .titlewrapper { padding: 0; margin-top: 30px; } .header-inner .Header .descriptionwrapper { padding: 0; margin: 0; } .cols-wrapper { margin-top: 56px; } .header-outer, .cols-wrapper, .footer-outer, .google-footer-outer { padding: 0 60px; } .header-inner { height: 256px; position: relative; } html, .header-inner a { color: #212121; color: rgba(0,0,0,.87); } .header-inner .google-logo { display: inline-block; background-size: contain; z-index: 1; height: 70px; overflow: hidden; margin-top: 4px; margin-right: 8px; } .header-left { position: absolute; top: 50%; -webkit-transform: translateY(-50%); transform: translateY(-50%); margin-top: 12px; width: 100%; } .google-logo { margin-left: -4px; } .google-logo img{ height:70px; } #google-footer { position: relative; font-size: 13px; list-style: none; text-align: right; } #google-footer a { color: #444; } #google-footer ul { margin: 0; padding: 0; height: 144px; line-height: 144px; } #google-footer ul li { display: inline; } #google-footer ul li:before { color: #999; content: "\00b7"; font-weight: bold; margin: 5px; } #google-footer ul li:first-child:before { content: ''; } #google-footer .google-logo-dark { left: 0; margin-top: -16px; position: absolute; top: 50%; } /** Sitemap links. **/ .footer-inner-2 { font-size: 14px; padding-top: 42px; padding-bottom: 74px; } .footer-inner-2 .HTML h2 { color: #212121; 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} #ArchiveList .expanded > ul:last-child { margin-bottom: 16px; } #ArchiveList .archivedate { width: 100%; } /* Months */ .BlogArchive .items { max-width: 150px; margin-left: -4px; } .BlogArchive .expanded .items { margin-bottom: 10px; overflow: hidden; } .BlogArchive .items > ul { float: left; height: 32px; } .BlogArchive .items a { padding: 0 4px; } .Label { font-size: 13px; font-weight: normal; } .sidebar-icon { display: inline-block; width: 24px; height: 24px; vertical-align: middle; margin-right: 12px; margin-top: -1px } .Label a { margin-right: 4px; } .Label .widget-content { display: none; } .FollowByEmail { font-size: 13px; font-weight: normal; } .FollowByEmail h2 { background: url("data:image/png;base64,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"); background-repeat: no-repeat; background-position: 0 50%; text-indent: 30px; } .FollowByEmail .widget-content { display: none; } .searchBox input { border: 1px solid #eee; color: #212121; color: rgba(0,0,0,.87); font-size: 14px; padding: 8px 8px 8px 40px; width: 164px; font-family: Roboto, sans-serif; background: url("https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/1x/search_grey600_24dp.png") 8px center no-repeat; } .searchBox ::-webkit-input-placeholder { /* WebKit, Blink, Edge */ color: rgba(0,0,0,.54); } .searchBox :-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 4 to 18 */ color: #000; opacity: 0.54; } .searchBox ::-moz-placeholder { /* Mozilla Firefox 19+ */ color: #000; opacity: 0.54; } .searchBox :-ms-input-placeholder { /* Internet Explorer 10-11 */ color: #757575; } .widget-item-control { margin-top: 0px; } .section { margin: 0; padding: 0; } #sidebar-top { border: 1px solid #eee; } #sidebar-top > div { margin: 16px 0; } .widget ul { line-height: 1.6; } /*main post*/ .post { margin-bottom:30px; 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} .label-footer { margin-bottom: 12px; margin-top: 12px; } .comment-img { margin-right: 16px; opacity: 0.54; vertical-align: middle; } #main .post .post-header .published { margin-bottom: 40px; margin-top: -2px; } .post .post-content { color: #212121; color: rgba(0,0,0,.87); font-size: 17px; margin: 25px 0 36px 0; line-height: 32px; } .post-body .post-content ul, .post-body .post-content ol { margin: 16px 0; padding: 0 48px; } .post-summary { display: none; } /* Another old-style caption. */ .post-content div i, .post-content div + i { font-size: 14px; font-style: normal; color: #757575; color: rgba(0,0,0,.54); display: block; line-height: 24px; margin-bottom: 16px; text-align: left; } /* Another old-style caption (with link) */ .post-content a > i { color: #4184F3 !important; } /* Old-style captions for images. */ .post-content .separator + div:not(.separator) { margin-top: -16px; } /* Capture section headers. */ .post-content br + br + b, .post-content .space + .space + b, .post-content .separator + b { display: inline-block; margin-bottom: 8px; margin-top: 24px; } .post-content li { line-height: 32px; } /* Override all post images/videos to left align. */ .post-content .separator, .post-content > div { text-align: left; } .post-content .separator > a, .post-content .separator > span { margin-left: 0 !important; } .post-content img { max-width: 100%; height: auto; width: auto; } .post-content .tr-caption-container img { margin-bottom: 12px; } .post-content iframe, .post-content embed { max-width: 100%; } .post-content .carousel-container { margin-bottom: 48px; } #main .post-content b { font-weight: 500; } /* These are the main paragraph spacing tweaks. */ #main .post-content br { content: ' '; display: block; padding: 4px; } .post-content .space { display: block; height: 8px; } .post-content iframe + .space, .post-content iframe + br { padding: 0 !important; } #main .post .jump-link { margin-bottom:10px; } .post-content img, .post-content iframe { margin: 30px 0 20px 0; } .post-content > img:first-child, .post-content > iframe:first-child { margin-top: 0; } .col-right .section { padding: 0 16px; } #aside { background:#fff; border:1px solid #eee; border-top: 0; } #aside .widget { margin:0; } #aside .widget h2, #ArchiveList .toggle + a.post-count-link { color: #212121; color: rgba(0,0,0,.87); font-weight: 400 !important; margin: 0; } #ArchiveList .toggle { float: right; } #ArchiveList .toggle .material-icons { padding-top: 4px; } #sidebar .tab { cursor: pointer; } #sidebar .tab .arrow { display: inline-block; float: right; } #sidebar .tab .icon { display: inline-block; vertical-align: top; height: 24px; width: 24px; margin-right: 13px; margin-left: -1px; margin-top: 1px; color: #757575; color: rgba(0,0,0,.54); } #sidebar .widget-content > :first-child { padding-top: 8px; } #sidebar .active .tab .arrow { -ms-transform: rotate(180deg); transform: rotate(180deg); } #sidebar .arrow { color: #757575; color: rgba(0,0,0,.54); } #sidebar .widget h2 { font-size: 14px; line-height: 24px; display: inline-block; } #sidebar .widget .BlogArchive { padding-bottom: 8px; } #sidebar .widget { border-bottom: 1px solid #eee; box-shadow: 0px 1px 0 white; margin-bottom: 0; padding: 14px 0; min-height: 20px; } #sidebar .widget:last-child { border-bottom: none; box-shadow: none; margin-bottom: 0; } #sidebar ul { margin: 0; padding: 0; } #sidebar ul li { list-style:none; padding:0; } #sidebar ul li a { line-height: 32px; } #sidebar .archive { background-image: url("data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAABAAAAAYCAYAAADzoH0MAAAAGXRFWHRTb2Z0d2FyZQBBZG9iZSBJbWFnZVJlYWR5ccllPAAAAE1JREFUeNpiNDY23s9AAWBioBCwYBM8c+YMVsUmJibEGYBNMS5DaeMFfDYSZQA2v9I3FrB5AZeriI4FmnrBccCT8mhmGs1MwyAzAQQYAKEWG9zm9QFEAAAAAElFTkSuQmCC"); height: 24px; line-height: 24px; padding-left: 30px; } #sidebar .labels { background-image: url("data:image/png;base64,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"); height: 20px; line-height: 20px; padding-left: 30px; } #sidebar .rss a { background-image: url("data:image/png;base64,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"); } #sidebar .subscription a { background-image: url("data:image/png;base64,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"); 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//]]> </script> <noscript> <img alt='' height='1' src='https://ad.doubleclick.net/ddm/activity/src=2542116;type=gblog;cat=googl0;ord=1?' width='1'/> </noscript> <!-- Header --> <div class='header-outer'> <div class='header-inner'> <div class='section' id='header'><div class='widget Header' data-version='1' id='Header1'> <div class='header-left'> <div class='header-title'> <a class='google-logo' href='https://blog.chromium.org/'> <img alt="Chromium Blog" height="50" src="//1.bp.blogspot.com/-vkF7AFJOwBk/VkQxeAGi1mI/AAAAAAAARYo/57denvsQ8zA/s1600-r/logo_chromium.png"> </a> <a href='/.'> <h2> Chromium Blog </h2> </a> </div> <div class='header-desc'> News and developments from the open source browser project </div> </div> </div></div> </div> </div> <!-- all content wrapper start --> <div class='cols-wrapper loading'> <div class='col-main-wrapper'> <div class='col-main'> <div class='section' id='main'><div class='widget Blog' data-version='1' id='Blog1'> <div class='post' data-id='4252577083982501261' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/08/seamlessly-use-your-passwords-and.html' itemprop='url' title='Seamlessly use your passwords and addresses in Chrome across all devices'> Seamlessly use your passwords and addresses in Chrome across all devices </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Tuesday, August 20, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <p> Last October, we <a href="https://blog.chromium.org/2023/11/a-new-way-to-seamlessly-browse-across.html">introduced</a> a new identity model on iOS (Chrome 118) and are excited to bring it to Android devices and Desktop soon. This model aligns closely with how you already use other Google apps and services. </p> <p> When we first launched <a href="https://chrome.googleblog.com/2009/11/bookmark-sync-and-more-speed-in-latest.html">Chrome sync back in 2009</a>, powered by the Google Account, our goal then, as it is today, was simple: help users access their bookmarks, passwords, tabs and more, across devices. At the time, this was best achieved by a sync model: synchronizing device data with your account and therefore requiring both sign-in and enabling sync. </p> <p> Over the years, the digital world has changed and user expectations have evolved significantly. Cloud services emerged in 2010, and over the past 15 years, the concept of having a digital identity became more prevalent, especially through smartphones and mobile apps. Today, users increasingly expect to just sign in to get access to their stuff and sign out to keep it safe. </p> <p> Given this evolution of technology and user norms, we’re continuing to make progress on transforming our legacy sync model into one that more seamlessly meets the expectation users have today. From the point of signing in to Chrome you’ll get access to your saved passwords, addresses, and other data from your Google Account. Where relevant, we’ll offer you the choice to sign into Chrome for a customized browsing experience on any device. For example, you can sign in and start to plan a trip on your phone during your commute, and then seamlessly finish it up on any device. Send tabs between your devices, find your bookmarks and use autogenerated passwords with ease. </p> <p> As always, you have control - we strive to provide an excellent browser experience regardless of whether you choose to sign in or not. Additionally, saving your history and open tabs to your account remains a separate opt-in after signing into Chrome. </p> <p> Stay tuned for updates on this change - already on iOS and coming to Android and Desktop soon. </p> <span class="post-author">Posted by Claire Charron, Chrome Product Manager </span> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <p> Last October, we <a href="https://blog.chromium.org/2023/11/a-new-way-to-seamlessly-browse-across.html">introduced</a> a new identity model on iOS (Chrome 118) and are excited to bring it to Android devices and Desktop soon. This model aligns closely with how you already use other Google apps and services. </p> <p> When we first launched <a href="https://chrome.googleblog.com/2009/11/bookmark-sync-and-more-speed-in-latest.html">Chrome sync back in 2009</a>, powered by the Google Account, our goal then, as it is today, was simple: help users access their bookmarks, passwords, tabs and more, across devices. At the time, this was best achieved by a sync model: synchronizing device data with your account and therefore requiring both sign-in and enabling sync. </p> <p> Over the years, the digital world has changed and user expectations have evolved significantly. Cloud services emerged in 2010, and over the past 15 years, the concept of having a digital identity became more prevalent, especially through smartphones and mobile apps. Today, users increasingly expect to just sign in to get access to their stuff and sign out to keep it safe. </p> <p> Given this evolution of technology and user norms, we’re continuing to make progress on transforming our legacy sync model into one that more seamlessly meets the expectation users have today. From the point of signing in to Chrome you’ll get access to your saved passwords, addresses, and other data from your Google Account. Where relevant, we’ll offer you the choice to sign into Chrome for a customized browsing experience on any device. For example, you can sign in and start to plan a trip on your phone during your commute, and then seamlessly finish it up on any device. Send tabs between your devices, find your bookmarks and use autogenerated passwords with ease. </p> <p> As always, you have control - we strive to provide an excellent browser experience regardless of whether you choose to sign in or not. Additionally, saving your history and open tabs to your account remains a separate opt-in after signing into Chrome. </p> <p> Stay tuned for updates on this change - already on iOS and coming to Android and Desktop soon. </p> <span class="post-author">Posted by Claire Charron, Chrome Product Manager </span> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </noscript> </div> </div> <div class='share'> <span class='twitter-custom social-wrapper' data-href='http://twitter.com/share?text=Chromium Blog:Seamlessly use your passwords and addresses in Chrome across all devices&url=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/08/seamlessly-use-your-passwords-and.html&via=ChromiumDev'> <img alt='Share on Twitter' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_twitter_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> <span class='fb-custom social-wrapper' data-href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/08/seamlessly-use-your-passwords-and.html'> <img alt='Share on Facebook' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_facebook_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> </div> <div class='post-footer'> <div class='cmt_iframe_holder' data-href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/08/seamlessly-use-your-passwords-and.html' data-viewtype='FILTERED_POSTMOD'></div> <a href='https://plus.google.com/112374322230920073195' rel='author' style='display:none;'> Google </a> <div class='label-footer'> </div> </div> </div> <div class='post' data-id='5918767882580515437' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/building-faster-smarter-chromebook.html' itemprop='url' title='Building a faster, smarter, Chromebook experience with the best of Google technologies '> Building a faster, smarter, Chromebook experience with the best of Google technologies </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Wednesday, June 12, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <p> <em>ChromeOS will soon be developed on large portions of the Android stack to bring Google AI, innovations, and features faster to users.</em> </p> <p> Over the last 13 years, we’ve evolved ChromeOS to deliver a secure, fast, and feature-rich Chromebook experience for millions of <a href="https://edu.google.com/intl/ALL_us/chromebooks/overview/">students and teachers</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/chromebook/family-features/">families</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/chromebook/discover/gaming/">gamers</a>, and <a href="https://chromeos.google/products/devices/">businesses</a> all over the world. With our recent <a href="https://blog.google/products/chromebooks/chromebook-plus-google/">announcements</a> around new features powered by Google AI and Gemini, Chromebooks now give us the opportunity to put powerful tools in the hands of more people to help with everyday tasks. </p> <p> To continue rolling out new Google AI features to users at a faster and even larger scale, we’ll be embracing portions of the Android stack, like the Android Linux kernel and Android frameworks, as part of the foundation of ChromeOS. We already have a strong history of collaboration, with <a href="https://chromeos.dev/en/android">Android apps available on ChromeOS</a> and the start of unifying our <a href="https://chromeos.dev/en/posts/androids-bluetooth-stack-fluoride-comes-to-chromeos">Bluetooth stacks</a> as of ChromeOS 122. </p> <p> Bringing the Android-based tech stack into ChromeOS will allow us to accelerate the pace of AI innovation at the core of ChromeOS, simplify engineering efforts, and help different devices like phones and accessories work better together with Chromebooks. At the same time, we will continue to deliver the unmatched security, consistent look and feel, and extensive management capabilities that ChromeOS users, enterprises, and schools love. </p> <p> These improvements in the tech stack are starting now but won’t be ready for consumers for quite some time. When they are, we’ll provide a seamless transition to the updated experience. In the meantime, we continue to be extremely excited about our continued progress on ChromeOS without any change to our regular software updates and new innovations. </p> <p> Chromebooks will continue to deliver a great experience for our millions of customers, users, developers and partners worldwide. We’ve never been more excited about the future of ChromeOS. </p> <p> <em>Posted by Prajakta Gudadhe, Senior Director, Engineering, ChromeOS & Alexander Kuscher, Senior Director, Product Management, ChromeOS</em> </p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <p> <em>ChromeOS will soon be developed on large portions of the Android stack to bring Google AI, innovations, and features faster to users.</em> </p> <p> Over the last 13 years, we’ve evolved ChromeOS to deliver a secure, fast, and feature-rich Chromebook experience for millions of <a href="https://edu.google.com/intl/ALL_us/chromebooks/overview/">students and teachers</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/chromebook/family-features/">families</a>, <a href="https://www.google.com/chromebook/discover/gaming/">gamers</a>, and <a href="https://chromeos.google/products/devices/">businesses</a> all over the world. With our recent <a href="https://blog.google/products/chromebooks/chromebook-plus-google/">announcements</a> around new features powered by Google AI and Gemini, Chromebooks now give us the opportunity to put powerful tools in the hands of more people to help with everyday tasks. </p> <p> To continue rolling out new Google AI features to users at a faster and even larger scale, we’ll be embracing portions of the Android stack, like the Android Linux kernel and Android frameworks, as part of the foundation of ChromeOS. We already have a strong history of collaboration, with <a href="https://chromeos.dev/en/android">Android apps available on ChromeOS</a> and the start of unifying our <a href="https://chromeos.dev/en/posts/androids-bluetooth-stack-fluoride-comes-to-chromeos">Bluetooth stacks</a> as of ChromeOS 122. </p> <p> Bringing the Android-based tech stack into ChromeOS will allow us to accelerate the pace of AI innovation at the core of ChromeOS, simplify engineering efforts, and help different devices like phones and accessories work better together with Chromebooks. At the same time, we will continue to deliver the unmatched security, consistent look and feel, and extensive management capabilities that ChromeOS users, enterprises, and schools love. </p> <p> These improvements in the tech stack are starting now but won’t be ready for consumers for quite some time. When they are, we’ll provide a seamless transition to the updated experience. In the meantime, we continue to be extremely excited about our continued progress on ChromeOS without any change to our regular software updates and new innovations. </p> <p> Chromebooks will continue to deliver a great experience for our millions of customers, users, developers and partners worldwide. We’ve never been more excited about the future of ChromeOS. </p> <p> <em>Posted by Prajakta Gudadhe, Senior Director, Engineering, ChromeOS & Alexander Kuscher, Senior Director, Product Management, ChromeOS</em> </p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </noscript> </div> </div> <div class='share'> <span class='twitter-custom social-wrapper' data-href='http://twitter.com/share?text=Chromium Blog:Building a faster, smarter, Chromebook experience with the best of Google technologies &url=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/building-faster-smarter-chromebook.html&via=ChromiumDev'> <img alt='Share on Twitter' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_twitter_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> <span class='fb-custom social-wrapper' data-href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/building-faster-smarter-chromebook.html'> <img alt='Share on Facebook' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_facebook_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> </div> <div class='post-footer'> <div class='cmt_iframe_holder' data-href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/building-faster-smarter-chromebook.html' data-viewtype='FILTERED_POSTMOD'></div> <a href='https://plus.google.com/112374322230920073195' rel='author' style='display:none;'> Google </a> <div class='label-footer'> </div> </div> </div> <div class='post' data-id='7799096493389946023' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/how-chrome-achieved-highest-score-ever.html' itemprop='url' title='How Chrome achieved the highest score ever on Speedometer 3'> How Chrome achieved the highest score ever on Speedometer 3 </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Thursday, June 6, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <p><em><br /></em></p><p style="text-align: center;"></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTQhp2W8dIjin6cG9FZFPANCCxZkFh9n1Nkn60O8XvgU4XVY_rq3ChNITmiJ1VG16BHnsxVijTYMc06SNA0VHjqfee6dqZLgfjazWxh7p1b3i-pj4thXDt3QyK3vWSpRgrTHaxiSFfPvc1YRDtdcBOorm85i53-FebJDWUXrJA4a_oMAYNbxjTFE0PPbJc/s400/Fast%20Curious_image.png" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="166" data-original-width="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTQhp2W8dIjin6cG9FZFPANCCxZkFh9n1Nkn60O8XvgU4XVY_rq3ChNITmiJ1VG16BHnsxVijTYMc06SNA0VHjqfee6dqZLgfjazWxh7p1b3i-pj4thXDt3QyK3vWSpRgrTHaxiSFfPvc1YRDtdcBOorm85i53-FebJDWUXrJA4a_oMAYNbxjTFE0PPbJc/s16000/Fast%20Curious_image.png" /></a></div><br /><em><br /></em><p></p><p> <em>Today’s The Fast and the Curious post explores how Chrome achieved the highest score on the new Speedometer 3.0, an upgraded browser benchmarking tool to optimize the performance of Web applications. Try out <a href="https://www.google.com/chrome/">Chrome</a> today! </em></p> <p> <a href="https://browserbench.org/Speedometer3.0/">Speedometer 3.0</a> is a recently published benchmark for <a href="https://webkit.org/blog/15131/speedometer-3-0-the-best-way-yet-to-measure-browser-performance/">measuring browser performance</a> that was created as an industry collaboration between companies like Google, Apple, Mozilla, Intel, and Microsoft. This benchmark helped us identify areas in which we could optimize Chrome to deliver a faster browser experience to all our users. </p> <p> Here’s a closer look at how we further optimized Chrome to achieve the highest score ever Speedometer 3, by carefully tracking its recent performance over time as the updated benchmark was being developed. Since the inception of Speedometer 3 in May 2022, we've driven a 72% increase in Chrome’s Speedometer score - translating into performance gains for our users: </p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhWV2DrIDMUUKPwXhOGaWNB1Md15huKND9UdpxiFs8taTD8PvDbGcbQnqgzibx8A9Q0SShTLxW0AyjGoJnNwIW-OEPfo5NN8vy0KvcS6vj7PnscI2-FE7_TZ19aTsjIRK5iYohctES6JgahB5W72NJVDkGJ_LhhyT_f9dcGKhVD9FsupDKI_bGwm4WtHw-/s8333/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line%20Graph%20_%20Speedometer%20improvements_HighRes-04.png" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="5151" data-original-width="8333" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhWV2DrIDMUUKPwXhOGaWNB1Md15huKND9UdpxiFs8taTD8PvDbGcbQnqgzibx8A9Q0SShTLxW0AyjGoJnNwIW-OEPfo5NN8vy0KvcS6vj7PnscI2-FE7_TZ19aTsjIRK5iYohctES6JgahB5W72NJVDkGJ_LhhyT_f9dcGKhVD9FsupDKI_bGwm4WtHw-/s16000/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line%20Graph%20_%20Speedometer%20improvements_HighRes-04.png" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Optimizing workloads </h3> <p> By looking at the workloads in Speedometer and in which functions Chrome was spending the most time, we were able to make targeted optimizations to those functions that each drove an increase in Chrome’s score. For example, the SpaceSplitString function is used heavily to turn space-separated strings such as those in “class=’foo bar’ ” into a list representation. In this function we removed some unnecessary bound checks. When we detect that there are duplicated stylesheets, we dedupe them and reference a single stylesheet instance. We made an optimization to reduce the cost of drawing paths and arcs by tuning memory allocations. When creating form editors we detected some unnecessary processing that occurs when form elements are created. Within querySelector, we were able to detect what selector was commonly used and create a hot-path for that. </p> <p> We <a href="https://blog.chromium.org/2023/04/more-ways-were-making-chrome-faster.html">previously shared</a> how we optimized innerHTML using specialized fast paths for parsing, an implementation that also <a href="https://github.com/WebKit/WebKit/pull/9926">made its way into WebKit</a>. Some workloads in Speedometer 3 use <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/DOMParser">DOMParser</a> so we extended the same optimization for another 1% gain. </p> <p> We worked with the Harfbuzz maintainer to also optimize how Chrome renders <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Advanced_Typography#AAT_Layout">AAT</a> fonts such as those used by Apple Mac OS system fonts. Text starts as a processed stream of unicode characters that is then transformed into a glyph stream that is then run through a state machine defined in the AAT font. The optimization allows us to determine more quickly whether glyphs actually participate in the rules for the state machine, leading to speed-ups when processing text using AAT. </p> <p> </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Picking the right code to focus on </h3> <p> An important strategy for achieving high performance is tiering up code, which is picking the right code to further optimize within the engine. Intel contributed profile guided tiering to V8 that remembers tiering decisions from the past such that if a function was stably tiered up in the past, we eagerly tier it up on future runs. </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Improving garbage collection </h3> <p> Another area of changes that drove around 3% progression on Speedometer 3 was improvements around garbage collection. V8’s garbage collector has a <a href="https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=2977741">long history of making use of renderer idle time</a> to avoid interfering with actual application code. The recent changes follow this spirit by extending existing mechanisms to prefer garbage collection in idle time on otherwise very active renderers where possible. Specifically, DOM finalization code that is run on reclaiming objects is now also run in idle time. Previously, such operations would compete with regular application code over CPU resources. In addition, V8 now supports a much more compact layout for objects that wrap DOM elements, i.e., all objects that are exposed to JavaScript frameworks. The compact layout reduces memory pressure and results in less time spent on garbage collection. </p> <p> <em>Posted by Thomas Nattestad, Chrome Product Manager</em> </p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <p><em><br /></em></p><p style="text-align: center;"></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTQhp2W8dIjin6cG9FZFPANCCxZkFh9n1Nkn60O8XvgU4XVY_rq3ChNITmiJ1VG16BHnsxVijTYMc06SNA0VHjqfee6dqZLgfjazWxh7p1b3i-pj4thXDt3QyK3vWSpRgrTHaxiSFfPvc1YRDtdcBOorm85i53-FebJDWUXrJA4a_oMAYNbxjTFE0PPbJc/s400/Fast%20Curious_image.png" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="166" data-original-width="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjTQhp2W8dIjin6cG9FZFPANCCxZkFh9n1Nkn60O8XvgU4XVY_rq3ChNITmiJ1VG16BHnsxVijTYMc06SNA0VHjqfee6dqZLgfjazWxh7p1b3i-pj4thXDt3QyK3vWSpRgrTHaxiSFfPvc1YRDtdcBOorm85i53-FebJDWUXrJA4a_oMAYNbxjTFE0PPbJc/s16000/Fast%20Curious_image.png" /></a></div><br /><em><br /></em><p></p><p> <em>Today’s The Fast and the Curious post explores how Chrome achieved the highest score on the new Speedometer 3.0, an upgraded browser benchmarking tool to optimize the performance of Web applications. Try out <a href="https://www.google.com/chrome/">Chrome</a> today! </em></p> <p> <a href="https://browserbench.org/Speedometer3.0/">Speedometer 3.0</a> is a recently published benchmark for <a href="https://webkit.org/blog/15131/speedometer-3-0-the-best-way-yet-to-measure-browser-performance/">measuring browser performance</a> that was created as an industry collaboration between companies like Google, Apple, Mozilla, Intel, and Microsoft. This benchmark helped us identify areas in which we could optimize Chrome to deliver a faster browser experience to all our users. </p> <p> Here’s a closer look at how we further optimized Chrome to achieve the highest score ever Speedometer 3, by carefully tracking its recent performance over time as the updated benchmark was being developed. Since the inception of Speedometer 3 in May 2022, we've driven a 72% increase in Chrome’s Speedometer score - translating into performance gains for our users: </p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhWV2DrIDMUUKPwXhOGaWNB1Md15huKND9UdpxiFs8taTD8PvDbGcbQnqgzibx8A9Q0SShTLxW0AyjGoJnNwIW-OEPfo5NN8vy0KvcS6vj7PnscI2-FE7_TZ19aTsjIRK5iYohctES6JgahB5W72NJVDkGJ_LhhyT_f9dcGKhVD9FsupDKI_bGwm4WtHw-/s8333/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line%20Graph%20_%20Speedometer%20improvements_HighRes-04.png" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="5151" data-original-width="8333" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjhWV2DrIDMUUKPwXhOGaWNB1Md15huKND9UdpxiFs8taTD8PvDbGcbQnqgzibx8A9Q0SShTLxW0AyjGoJnNwIW-OEPfo5NN8vy0KvcS6vj7PnscI2-FE7_TZ19aTsjIRK5iYohctES6JgahB5W72NJVDkGJ_LhhyT_f9dcGKhVD9FsupDKI_bGwm4WtHw-/s16000/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line%20Graph%20_%20Speedometer%20improvements_HighRes-04.png" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Optimizing workloads </h3> <p> By looking at the workloads in Speedometer and in which functions Chrome was spending the most time, we were able to make targeted optimizations to those functions that each drove an increase in Chrome’s score. For example, the SpaceSplitString function is used heavily to turn space-separated strings such as those in “class=’foo bar’ ” into a list representation. In this function we removed some unnecessary bound checks. When we detect that there are duplicated stylesheets, we dedupe them and reference a single stylesheet instance. We made an optimization to reduce the cost of drawing paths and arcs by tuning memory allocations. When creating form editors we detected some unnecessary processing that occurs when form elements are created. Within querySelector, we were able to detect what selector was commonly used and create a hot-path for that. </p> <p> We <a href="https://blog.chromium.org/2023/04/more-ways-were-making-chrome-faster.html">previously shared</a> how we optimized innerHTML using specialized fast paths for parsing, an implementation that also <a href="https://github.com/WebKit/WebKit/pull/9926">made its way into WebKit</a>. Some workloads in Speedometer 3 use <a href="https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/DOMParser">DOMParser</a> so we extended the same optimization for another 1% gain. </p> <p> We worked with the Harfbuzz maintainer to also optimize how Chrome renders <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_Advanced_Typography#AAT_Layout">AAT</a> fonts such as those used by Apple Mac OS system fonts. Text starts as a processed stream of unicode characters that is then transformed into a glyph stream that is then run through a state machine defined in the AAT font. The optimization allows us to determine more quickly whether glyphs actually participate in the rules for the state machine, leading to speed-ups when processing text using AAT. </p> <p> </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Picking the right code to focus on </h3> <p> An important strategy for achieving high performance is tiering up code, which is picking the right code to further optimize within the engine. Intel contributed profile guided tiering to V8 that remembers tiering decisions from the past such that if a function was stably tiered up in the past, we eagerly tier it up on future runs. </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Improving garbage collection </h3> <p> Another area of changes that drove around 3% progression on Speedometer 3 was improvements around garbage collection. V8’s garbage collector has a <a href="https://queue.acm.org/detail.cfm?id=2977741">long history of making use of renderer idle time</a> to avoid interfering with actual application code. The recent changes follow this spirit by extending existing mechanisms to prefer garbage collection in idle time on otherwise very active renderers where possible. Specifically, DOM finalization code that is run on reclaiming objects is now also run in idle time. Previously, such operations would compete with regular application code over CPU resources. In addition, V8 now supports a much more compact layout for objects that wrap DOM elements, i.e., all objects that are exposed to JavaScript frameworks. The compact layout reduces memory pressure and results in less time spent on garbage collection. </p> <p> <em>Posted by Thomas Nattestad, Chrome Product Manager</em> </p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </noscript> </div> </div> <div class='share'> <span class='twitter-custom social-wrapper' data-href='http://twitter.com/share?text=Chromium Blog:How Chrome achieved the highest score ever on Speedometer 3&url=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/how-chrome-achieved-highest-score-ever.html&via=ChromiumDev'> <img alt='Share on Twitter' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_twitter_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> <span class='fb-custom social-wrapper' data-href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/how-chrome-achieved-highest-score-ever.html'> <img alt='Share on Facebook' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_facebook_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> </div> <div class='post-footer'> <div class='cmt_iframe_holder' data-href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/how-chrome-achieved-highest-score-ever.html' data-viewtype='FILTERED_POSTMOD'></div> <a href='https://plus.google.com/112374322230920073195' rel='author' style='display:none;'> Google </a> <div class='label-footer'> <span class='labels-caption'> Labels: </span> <span class='labels'> <a class='label' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/the%20fast%20and%20the%20curious' rel='tag'> the fast and the curious </a> </span> </div> </div> </div> <div class='post' data-id='2966402891480312376' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/introducing-shared-memory-versioning-to.html' itemprop='url' title='Introducing Shared Memory Versioning to improve slow interactions'> Introducing Shared Memory Versioning to improve slow interactions </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Monday, June 3, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <p style="text-align: center;"></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgULbG_V-g8EZnGGU7HOmjeHhtXqsFS5cXno21FsN1uucnkTMdlq9tL9rOoZW7fx5vqp6_nW3R5Ib4JJZxMr9zD-MVIqLuCyy8N6ZheCW4iYkI7unu2GX7mMG2PVHNkNrykjbgi5PUwurzRSbd89DP6k1hGe7hze6EKVAzo4XKO8b3NfiO4PRsnHNwMKBDa/s400/Fast%20Curious_image.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="166" data-original-width="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgULbG_V-g8EZnGGU7HOmjeHhtXqsFS5cXno21FsN1uucnkTMdlq9tL9rOoZW7fx5vqp6_nW3R5Ib4JJZxMr9zD-MVIqLuCyy8N6ZheCW4iYkI7unu2GX7mMG2PVHNkNrykjbgi5PUwurzRSbd89DP6k1hGe7hze6EKVAzo4XKO8b3NfiO4PRsnHNwMKBDa/s16000/Fast%20Curious_image.png" /></a></div><br /><em><br /></em><p></p><p> <em>On the Chrome team, we believe it’s not sufficient to be fast most of the time, we have to be fast all of the time. Today’s The Fast and the Curious post explores how we contributed to Core Web Vitals by surveying the field data of Chrome responding to user interactions across all websites, ultimately improving performance of the web. </em> </p> <p> As billions of people turn to the web to get things done every day, the browser becomes more responsible for hosting a multitude of apps at once, resource contention becomes a challenge. The multi-process Chrome browser contends for multiple resources: CPU and memory of course, but also its own queues of work between its internal services (in this article, the network service). </p> <p> This is why we’ve been focused on identifying and fixing <a href="https://web.dev/articles/inp">slow interactions</a> from Chrome users’ field data, which is the authoritative source when it comes to real user experiences. We gather this field data by recording anonymized Perfetto traces on Chrome Canary, and report them using a privacy-preserving filter. </p> <p> When looking at field data of slow interactions, one particular cause caught our attention: recurring synchronous calls to fetch the current site’s cookies from the network service. </p> <p> Let’s dive into some history. </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"><b> Cookies under an evolving web </b></h3> <p> Cookies have been part of the web platform since the very beginning. They are commonly created like this: </p> <pre class="prettyprint"> document.cookie = "user=Alice;color=blue" </pre> <p> And later retrieved like this:<br /> </p> <pre class="prettyprint"> // Assuming a `getCookie` helper method: getCookie("user", document.cookie) </pre> <p> Its implementation was simple in single-process browsers, which kept the cookie jar in memory. </p> <p> Over time, browsers became multi-process, and the process hosting the cookie jar became responsible for answering more and more queries. Because the Web Spec requires Javascript to fetch cookies synchronously, however, answering each <code>document.cookie</code> query is a blocking operation. </p> <p> The operation itself is very fast, so this approach was generally fine, but under heavy load scenarios where multiple websites are requesting cookies (and other resources) from the network service, the queue of requests could get backed up. </p> <p> We discovered through field traces of slow interactions that some websites were triggering inefficient scenarios with cookies being fetched multiple times in a row. We landed additional metrics to measure how often a <code>GetCookieString()</code> IPC was redundant (same value returned as last time) across all navigations. We were astonished to discover that <strong>87% of cookie accesses were redundant</strong> and that, in some cases, this could happen hundreds of times per second. </p> <p> The simple design of <code>document.cookie </code>was backfiring as JavaScript on the web was using it like a local value when it was really a remote lookup. Was this a classic computer science case of caching?! Not so fast! </p> <p> The web spec allows collaborating domains to modify each other’s cookies. Hence, a simple cache per renderer process didn’t work, as it would have prevented writes from propagating between such sites (causing stale cookies and, for example, unsynchronized carts in ecommerce applications). </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> A new paradigm: Shared Memory Versioning </h3> <p> We solved this with a new paradigm which we called <a href="https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:mojo/public/cpp/base/shared_memory_version.h">Shared Memory Versioning</a>. The idea is that each value of <code>document.cookie</code> is now paired with a monotonically increasing version. Each renderer caches its last read of <code>document.cookie</code> alongside that version. The network service hosts the version of each <code>document.cookie</code> in shared memory. Renderers can thus tell whether they have the latest version without having to send an inter-process query to the network service.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhl8OJ82Etmnlpmr2nRzeWSmYBk-2yRPAaDSrftFMxYp-hRkb8ZIxYzIMLG09c9iqHB-dD8UrLj3GaXio7rHjOOpLGY6YBmVYQaex21mqaTGFLSHJVMrUywbU13bvgNeVC0PxiT9sV3Wj33H0Rtr0rzOdHCJBzjQe1IGBjC-8uftmM_D5XBL0CoVMUPZMuU/s7748/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line_Reduce%20cookies%20IPC_V2_HighRes.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="5251" data-original-width="7748" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhl8OJ82Etmnlpmr2nRzeWSmYBk-2yRPAaDSrftFMxYp-hRkb8ZIxYzIMLG09c9iqHB-dD8UrLj3GaXio7rHjOOpLGY6YBmVYQaex21mqaTGFLSHJVMrUywbU13bvgNeVC0PxiT9sV3Wj33H0Rtr0rzOdHCJBzjQe1IGBjC-8uftmM_D5XBL0CoVMUPZMuU/s16000/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line_Reduce%20cookies%20IPC_V2_HighRes.png" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p><p>This reduced cookie-related inter-process messages by 80% and made <code>document.cookie</code> accesses 60% faster 🥳.</p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Hypothesis testing </h3> <p> Improving an algorithm is nice, but what we ultimately care about is whether that improvement results in improving slow interactions for users. In other words, we need to test the hypothesis that stalled cookie queries were a significant cause of slow interactions. </p> <p> To achieve this, we used Chrome’s A/B testing framework to study the effect and determined that it, combined with other improvements to reduce resource contention, improved the slowest interactions by approximately 5% on all platforms. This further resulted in more websites <a href="https://httparchive.org/reports/chrome-ux-report?start=2023_11_01&end=latest&view=list#cruxFastInp">passing Core Web Vitals</a> 🥳. All of this adds up to a more seamless web for users.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGnZvKinh7TK5YiwNx1HC6vzv5CCyKPJoRGhfRzZA0MlBLl-8ho5ciLI8WyFka6QcqmcRSWgMIjz-vsfsiLBWu-dYaZ7Df1j5Ow2YRB3PkQ-k7fjxsCcZ2oJpbjYKxK92pELqHWpcXw9PwaVn4wGSzgkIRj7DLMLZAAeEYkd8mYC8F4OOcJFiePTmsQp_G/s1176/Screenshot%202024-05-30%20at%2010.19.00%E2%80%AFAM.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="552" data-original-width="1176" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGnZvKinh7TK5YiwNx1HC6vzv5CCyKPJoRGhfRzZA0MlBLl-8ho5ciLI8WyFka6QcqmcRSWgMIjz-vsfsiLBWu-dYaZ7Df1j5Ow2YRB3PkQ-k7fjxsCcZ2oJpbjYKxK92pELqHWpcXw9PwaVn4wGSzgkIRj7DLMLZAAeEYkd8mYC8F4OOcJFiePTmsQp_G/s16000/Screenshot%202024-05-30%20at%2010.19.00%E2%80%AFAM.png" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p><p><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">Timeline of the weighted average of the slowest interactions across the web on Chrome as this was released to 1% (Nov), 50% (Dec), and then all users (Feb).</span></i></p><div>Onward to a seamless web!</div> <p> <em>By Gabriel Charette, Olivier Li Shing Tat-Dupuis, Carlos Caballero Grolimund, and François Doray, from the Chrome engineering team</em> </p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <p style="text-align: center;"></p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgULbG_V-g8EZnGGU7HOmjeHhtXqsFS5cXno21FsN1uucnkTMdlq9tL9rOoZW7fx5vqp6_nW3R5Ib4JJZxMr9zD-MVIqLuCyy8N6ZheCW4iYkI7unu2GX7mMG2PVHNkNrykjbgi5PUwurzRSbd89DP6k1hGe7hze6EKVAzo4XKO8b3NfiO4PRsnHNwMKBDa/s400/Fast%20Curious_image.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="166" data-original-width="400" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgULbG_V-g8EZnGGU7HOmjeHhtXqsFS5cXno21FsN1uucnkTMdlq9tL9rOoZW7fx5vqp6_nW3R5Ib4JJZxMr9zD-MVIqLuCyy8N6ZheCW4iYkI7unu2GX7mMG2PVHNkNrykjbgi5PUwurzRSbd89DP6k1hGe7hze6EKVAzo4XKO8b3NfiO4PRsnHNwMKBDa/s16000/Fast%20Curious_image.png" /></a></div><br /><em><br /></em><p></p><p> <em>On the Chrome team, we believe it’s not sufficient to be fast most of the time, we have to be fast all of the time. Today’s The Fast and the Curious post explores how we contributed to Core Web Vitals by surveying the field data of Chrome responding to user interactions across all websites, ultimately improving performance of the web. </em> </p> <p> As billions of people turn to the web to get things done every day, the browser becomes more responsible for hosting a multitude of apps at once, resource contention becomes a challenge. The multi-process Chrome browser contends for multiple resources: CPU and memory of course, but also its own queues of work between its internal services (in this article, the network service). </p> <p> This is why we’ve been focused on identifying and fixing <a href="https://web.dev/articles/inp">slow interactions</a> from Chrome users’ field data, which is the authoritative source when it comes to real user experiences. We gather this field data by recording anonymized Perfetto traces on Chrome Canary, and report them using a privacy-preserving filter. </p> <p> When looking at field data of slow interactions, one particular cause caught our attention: recurring synchronous calls to fetch the current site’s cookies from the network service. </p> <p> Let’s dive into some history. </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"><b> Cookies under an evolving web </b></h3> <p> Cookies have been part of the web platform since the very beginning. They are commonly created like this: </p> <pre class="prettyprint"> document.cookie = "user=Alice;color=blue" </pre> <p> And later retrieved like this:<br /> </p> <pre class="prettyprint"> // Assuming a `getCookie` helper method: getCookie("user", document.cookie) </pre> <p> Its implementation was simple in single-process browsers, which kept the cookie jar in memory. </p> <p> Over time, browsers became multi-process, and the process hosting the cookie jar became responsible for answering more and more queries. Because the Web Spec requires Javascript to fetch cookies synchronously, however, answering each <code>document.cookie</code> query is a blocking operation. </p> <p> The operation itself is very fast, so this approach was generally fine, but under heavy load scenarios where multiple websites are requesting cookies (and other resources) from the network service, the queue of requests could get backed up. </p> <p> We discovered through field traces of slow interactions that some websites were triggering inefficient scenarios with cookies being fetched multiple times in a row. We landed additional metrics to measure how often a <code>GetCookieString()</code> IPC was redundant (same value returned as last time) across all navigations. We were astonished to discover that <strong>87% of cookie accesses were redundant</strong> and that, in some cases, this could happen hundreds of times per second. </p> <p> The simple design of <code>document.cookie </code>was backfiring as JavaScript on the web was using it like a local value when it was really a remote lookup. Was this a classic computer science case of caching?! Not so fast! </p> <p> The web spec allows collaborating domains to modify each other’s cookies. Hence, a simple cache per renderer process didn’t work, as it would have prevented writes from propagating between such sites (causing stale cookies and, for example, unsynchronized carts in ecommerce applications). </p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> A new paradigm: Shared Memory Versioning </h3> <p> We solved this with a new paradigm which we called <a href="https://source.chromium.org/chromium/chromium/src/+/main:mojo/public/cpp/base/shared_memory_version.h">Shared Memory Versioning</a>. The idea is that each value of <code>document.cookie</code> is now paired with a monotonically increasing version. Each renderer caches its last read of <code>document.cookie</code> alongside that version. The network service hosts the version of each <code>document.cookie</code> in shared memory. Renderers can thus tell whether they have the latest version without having to send an inter-process query to the network service.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhl8OJ82Etmnlpmr2nRzeWSmYBk-2yRPAaDSrftFMxYp-hRkb8ZIxYzIMLG09c9iqHB-dD8UrLj3GaXio7rHjOOpLGY6YBmVYQaex21mqaTGFLSHJVMrUywbU13bvgNeVC0PxiT9sV3Wj33H0Rtr0rzOdHCJBzjQe1IGBjC-8uftmM_D5XBL0CoVMUPZMuU/s7748/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line_Reduce%20cookies%20IPC_V2_HighRes.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="5251" data-original-width="7748" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhl8OJ82Etmnlpmr2nRzeWSmYBk-2yRPAaDSrftFMxYp-hRkb8ZIxYzIMLG09c9iqHB-dD8UrLj3GaXio7rHjOOpLGY6YBmVYQaex21mqaTGFLSHJVMrUywbU13bvgNeVC0PxiT9sV3Wj33H0Rtr0rzOdHCJBzjQe1IGBjC-8uftmM_D5XBL0CoVMUPZMuU/s16000/Fast%20&%20Curious%20In-Line_Reduce%20cookies%20IPC_V2_HighRes.png" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p><p>This reduced cookie-related inter-process messages by 80% and made <code>document.cookie</code> accesses 60% faster 🥳.</p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> Hypothesis testing </h3> <p> Improving an algorithm is nice, but what we ultimately care about is whether that improvement results in improving slow interactions for users. In other words, we need to test the hypothesis that stalled cookie queries were a significant cause of slow interactions. </p> <p> To achieve this, we used Chrome’s A/B testing framework to study the effect and determined that it, combined with other improvements to reduce resource contention, improved the slowest interactions by approximately 5% on all platforms. This further resulted in more websites <a href="https://httparchive.org/reports/chrome-ux-report?start=2023_11_01&end=latest&view=list#cruxFastInp">passing Core Web Vitals</a> 🥳. All of this adds up to a more seamless web for users.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGnZvKinh7TK5YiwNx1HC6vzv5CCyKPJoRGhfRzZA0MlBLl-8ho5ciLI8WyFka6QcqmcRSWgMIjz-vsfsiLBWu-dYaZ7Df1j5Ow2YRB3PkQ-k7fjxsCcZ2oJpbjYKxK92pELqHWpcXw9PwaVn4wGSzgkIRj7DLMLZAAeEYkd8mYC8F4OOcJFiePTmsQp_G/s1176/Screenshot%202024-05-30%20at%2010.19.00%E2%80%AFAM.png" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img border="0" data-original-height="552" data-original-width="1176" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiGnZvKinh7TK5YiwNx1HC6vzv5CCyKPJoRGhfRzZA0MlBLl-8ho5ciLI8WyFka6QcqmcRSWgMIjz-vsfsiLBWu-dYaZ7Df1j5Ow2YRB3PkQ-k7fjxsCcZ2oJpbjYKxK92pELqHWpcXw9PwaVn4wGSzgkIRj7DLMLZAAeEYkd8mYC8F4OOcJFiePTmsQp_G/s16000/Screenshot%202024-05-30%20at%2010.19.00%E2%80%AFAM.png" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p><p><i><span style="font-size: x-small;">Timeline of the weighted average of the slowest interactions across the web on Chrome as this was released to 1% (Nov), 50% (Dec), and then all users (Feb).</span></i></p><div>Onward to a seamless web!</div> <p> <em>By Gabriel Charette, Olivier Li Shing Tat-Dupuis, Carlos Caballero Grolimund, and François Doray, from the Chrome engineering team</em> </p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </noscript> </div> </div> <div class='share'> <span class='twitter-custom social-wrapper' data-href='http://twitter.com/share?text=Chromium Blog:Introducing Shared Memory Versioning to improve slow interactions&url=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/introducing-shared-memory-versioning-to.html&via=ChromiumDev'> <img alt='Share on Twitter' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_twitter_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> <span class='fb-custom social-wrapper' data-href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/introducing-shared-memory-versioning-to.html'> <img alt='Share on Facebook' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_facebook_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> </div> <div class='post-footer'> <div class='cmt_iframe_holder' data-href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/06/introducing-shared-memory-versioning-to.html' data-viewtype='FILTERED_POSTMOD'></div> <a href='https://plus.google.com/112374322230920073195' rel='author' style='display:none;'> Google </a> <div class='label-footer'> <span class='labels-caption'> Labels: </span> <span class='labels'> <a class='label' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/the%20fast%20and%20the%20curious' rel='tag'> the fast and the curious </a> </span> </div> </div> </div> <div class='post' data-id='4730101027872135523' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/manifest-v2-phase-out-begins.html' itemprop='url' title='Manifest V2 phase-out begins'> Manifest V2 phase-out begins </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Thursday, May 30, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <td><em>Update (10/10/2024): We’ve started disabling extensions still using Manifest V2 in Chrome stable. Read more details in the <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/develop/migrate/mv2-deprecation-timeline">MV2 support timeline documentation</a>.</em> </p> </td> <p> In November 2023, we <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/resuming-the-transition-to-mv3">shared a timeline</a> for the phasing out of Manifest V2 extensions in Chrome. Based on the progress and feedback we’ve seen from the community, we’re now ready to roll out these changes as scheduled. </p> <p> We’ve always <a href="https://security.googleblog.com/2019/06/improving-security-and-privacy-for.html">been clear</a> that the goal of Manifest V3 is to protect existing functionality while improving the security, privacy, performance and trustworthiness of the extension ecosystem as a whole. We appreciate the collaboration and feedback from the community that has allowed us - and continues to allow us - to constantly improve the extensions platform. </p> <p> <strong>Addressing community feedback</strong> </p> <p> We understand migrations of this magnitude can be challenging, which is why we’ve listened to developer feedback and spent years refining Manifest V3 to support the innovation happening across the extensions community. This included adding support for user scripts and introducing offscreen documents to allow extensions to use DOM APIs from a background context. Based on input from the extension community, we also increased the number of rulesets for declarativeNetRequest, allowing extensions to bundle up to 330,000 static rules and dynamically add a further 30,000. You can find more detail in our <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/develop/concepts/content-filtering">content filtering guide</a>. </p><p>This month, we made the transition even easier for extensions using declarativeNetRequest with the launch of <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/extensions-skip-review-eligible-changes">review skipping for safe rule updates</a>. If the only changes are for safe modifications to an extension’s static rule list for declarativeNetRequest, Chrome will approve the update in minutes. Coupled with the <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/chrome-webstore-rollback">launch of version roll back</a> last month, developers now have greater control over how their updates are deployed.</p> <p> <strong>Ecosystem progress </strong> </p> <p> After we addressed the top issues and feature gaps blocking migration last year, we saw an acceleration of extensions migrating successfully to Manifest V3. Over the past year, we’ve even been able to invite some developers - such as Eyeo, the makers of Adblock Plus - and GDE members like Matt Frisbie to share their experiences and insights with the community through <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/eyeos-journey-to-testing-mv3-service%20worker-suspension?hl=en">guest posts</a> and <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8P-Sc8ZaViY">YouTube videos</a>. </p> <p> Now, over 85% of actively maintained extensions in the Chrome Web Store are running Manifest V3, and the top content filtering extensions all have Manifest V3 versions available - with options for users of AdBlock, Adblock Plus, uBlock Origin and AdGuard. </p> <p> <strong>What to expect next</strong> </p> <p> Starting on June 3 on the Chrome Beta, Dev and Canary channels, if users still have Manifest V2 extensions installed, some will start to see a warning banner when visiting their extension management page - chrome://extensions - informing them that some (Manifest V2) extensions they have installed will soon no longer be supported. At the same time, extensions with the Featured badge that are still using Manifest V2 will lose their badge. </p> <p> This will be followed gradually in the coming months by the disabling of those extensions. Users will be directed to the Chrome Web Store, where they will be recommended Manifest V3 alternatives for their disabled extension. For a short time after the extensions are disabled, users will still be able to turn their Manifest V2 extensions back on, but over time, this toggle will go away as well. </p> <p> Like any big launches, all these changes will begin in pre-stable channel builds of Chrome first – Chrome Beta, Dev, and Canary. The changes will be rolled out over the coming months to Chrome Stable, with the goal of completing the transition by the beginning of next year. Enterprises using the <a href="https://chromeenterprise.google/policies/#ExtensionManifestV2Availability">ExtensionManifestV2Availability</a> policy will be exempt from any browser changes until June 2025. </p> <p> We’ve shared more information about the process in our recent <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvxOW21na48">Chrome extensions Google I/O talk</a>. If you have any additional questions, don’t hesitate to reach out via the Chromium extensions mailing list. </p> <span class="post-author">Posted by David Li, Product Manager, Chrome Extensions</span> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <td><em>Update (10/10/2024): We’ve started disabling extensions still using Manifest V2 in Chrome stable. Read more details in the <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/develop/migrate/mv2-deprecation-timeline">MV2 support timeline documentation</a>.</em> </p> </td> <p> In November 2023, we <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/resuming-the-transition-to-mv3">shared a timeline</a> for the phasing out of Manifest V2 extensions in Chrome. Based on the progress and feedback we’ve seen from the community, we’re now ready to roll out these changes as scheduled. </p> <p> We’ve always <a href="https://security.googleblog.com/2019/06/improving-security-and-privacy-for.html">been clear</a> that the goal of Manifest V3 is to protect existing functionality while improving the security, privacy, performance and trustworthiness of the extension ecosystem as a whole. We appreciate the collaboration and feedback from the community that has allowed us - and continues to allow us - to constantly improve the extensions platform. </p> <p> <strong>Addressing community feedback</strong> </p> <p> We understand migrations of this magnitude can be challenging, which is why we’ve listened to developer feedback and spent years refining Manifest V3 to support the innovation happening across the extensions community. This included adding support for user scripts and introducing offscreen documents to allow extensions to use DOM APIs from a background context. Based on input from the extension community, we also increased the number of rulesets for declarativeNetRequest, allowing extensions to bundle up to 330,000 static rules and dynamically add a further 30,000. You can find more detail in our <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/extensions/develop/concepts/content-filtering">content filtering guide</a>. </p><p>This month, we made the transition even easier for extensions using declarativeNetRequest with the launch of <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/extensions-skip-review-eligible-changes">review skipping for safe rule updates</a>. If the only changes are for safe modifications to an extension’s static rule list for declarativeNetRequest, Chrome will approve the update in minutes. Coupled with the <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/chrome-webstore-rollback">launch of version roll back</a> last month, developers now have greater control over how their updates are deployed.</p> <p> <strong>Ecosystem progress </strong> </p> <p> After we addressed the top issues and feature gaps blocking migration last year, we saw an acceleration of extensions migrating successfully to Manifest V3. Over the past year, we’ve even been able to invite some developers - such as Eyeo, the makers of Adblock Plus - and GDE members like Matt Frisbie to share their experiences and insights with the community through <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/blog/eyeos-journey-to-testing-mv3-service%20worker-suspension?hl=en">guest posts</a> and <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8P-Sc8ZaViY">YouTube videos</a>. </p> <p> Now, over 85% of actively maintained extensions in the Chrome Web Store are running Manifest V3, and the top content filtering extensions all have Manifest V3 versions available - with options for users of AdBlock, Adblock Plus, uBlock Origin and AdGuard. </p> <p> <strong>What to expect next</strong> </p> <p> Starting on June 3 on the Chrome Beta, Dev and Canary channels, if users still have Manifest V2 extensions installed, some will start to see a warning banner when visiting their extension management page - chrome://extensions - informing them that some (Manifest V2) extensions they have installed will soon no longer be supported. At the same time, extensions with the Featured badge that are still using Manifest V2 will lose their badge. </p> <p> This will be followed gradually in the coming months by the disabling of those extensions. Users will be directed to the Chrome Web Store, where they will be recommended Manifest V3 alternatives for their disabled extension. For a short time after the extensions are disabled, users will still be able to turn their Manifest V2 extensions back on, but over time, this toggle will go away as well. </p> <p> Like any big launches, all these changes will begin in pre-stable channel builds of Chrome first – Chrome Beta, Dev, and Canary. The changes will be rolled out over the coming months to Chrome Stable, with the goal of completing the transition by the beginning of next year. Enterprises using the <a href="https://chromeenterprise.google/policies/#ExtensionManifestV2Availability">ExtensionManifestV2Availability</a> policy will be exempt from any browser changes until June 2025. </p> <p> We’ve shared more information about the process in our recent <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hvxOW21na48">Chrome extensions Google I/O talk</a>. If you have any additional questions, don’t hesitate to reach out via the Chromium extensions mailing list. </p> <span class="post-author">Posted by David Li, Product Manager, Chrome Extensions</span> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </noscript> </div> </div> <div class='share'> <span class='twitter-custom social-wrapper' data-href='http://twitter.com/share?text=Chromium Blog:Manifest V2 phase-out begins&url=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/manifest-v2-phase-out-begins.html&via=ChromiumDev'> <img alt='Share on Twitter' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_twitter_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> <span class='fb-custom social-wrapper' data-href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/manifest-v2-phase-out-begins.html'> <img alt='Share on Facebook' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_facebook_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> </div> <div class='post-footer'> <div class='cmt_iframe_holder' data-href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/manifest-v2-phase-out-begins.html' data-viewtype='FILTERED_POSTMOD'></div> <a href='https://plus.google.com/112374322230920073195' rel='author' style='display:none;'> Google </a> <div class='label-footer'> </div> </div> </div> <div class='post' data-id='2723696483376984731' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/multi-tasking-with-minimized-custom-tabs.html' itemprop='url' title='Multi-tasking with Minimized Custom Tabs'> Multi-tasking with Minimized Custom Tabs </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Wednesday, May 29, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <p> In the latest release of Chrome, we're introducing <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/android/custom-tabs#:~:text=Users%20can%20minimize,Chrome%20122%20Beta.">Minimized Custom Tabs</a>, a feature that allows users to effortlessly transition between native app and web content. With a simple tap on the down button in the Chrome Custom Tabs toolbar, users can minimize a Custom Tab into a compact, floating picture-in-picture window. This seamless integration enables multi-tasking across surfaces, enhancing the in-app web browsing experience. By tapping on the floating window, users can easily maximize the tab, restoring it to its original size.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKB-vt3k1oWC8dnOgKzw3mthZikPMXJnYOwbL01KoivsRt69r98CeEjTv0TeAFjfCHdCx6WoOaoXiDECWg5EHgYoUjxQxQTm9aFaSK-AyUFb6w6EyASeQiM2RVfJgm5mgw6haiQYbspQuOQlcTlYcVFo709bmtC2skBgSA9XZJpvhoPDViNTxOkaDQ6IUD/s1228/Minimixed%20Custom%20Tabs.gif" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Minimize a Chrome Custom Tab to interact with the background app" border="0" data-original-height="920" data-original-width="1228" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKB-vt3k1oWC8dnOgKzw3mthZikPMXJnYOwbL01KoivsRt69r98CeEjTv0TeAFjfCHdCx6WoOaoXiDECWg5EHgYoUjxQxQTm9aFaSK-AyUFb6w6EyASeQiM2RVfJgm5mgw6haiQYbspQuOQlcTlYcVFo709bmtC2skBgSA9XZJpvhoPDViNTxOkaDQ6IUD/s16000/Minimixed%20Custom%20Tabs.gif" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> How to get started </h3> <p> Because this change happens at the browser level, developers who use Chrome Custom Tabs will see this change automatically applied starting with Chrome version M124. End users will see the Minimize icon in the Chrome Custom Tab toolbar. </p> <p> Please note that this is a change in Chrome, and we hope other browsers will adopt similar functionality. </p> <p><i> Posted by Victor Gallet, Senior Product Manager </i></p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <p> In the latest release of Chrome, we're introducing <a href="https://developer.chrome.com/docs/android/custom-tabs#:~:text=Users%20can%20minimize,Chrome%20122%20Beta.">Minimized Custom Tabs</a>, a feature that allows users to effortlessly transition between native app and web content. With a simple tap on the down button in the Chrome Custom Tabs toolbar, users can minimize a Custom Tab into a compact, floating picture-in-picture window. This seamless integration enables multi-tasking across surfaces, enhancing the in-app web browsing experience. By tapping on the floating window, users can easily maximize the tab, restoring it to its original size.</p><div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKB-vt3k1oWC8dnOgKzw3mthZikPMXJnYOwbL01KoivsRt69r98CeEjTv0TeAFjfCHdCx6WoOaoXiDECWg5EHgYoUjxQxQTm9aFaSK-AyUFb6w6EyASeQiM2RVfJgm5mgw6haiQYbspQuOQlcTlYcVFo709bmtC2skBgSA9XZJpvhoPDViNTxOkaDQ6IUD/s1228/Minimixed%20Custom%20Tabs.gif" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: 1em; margin-right: 1em;"><img alt="Minimize a Chrome Custom Tab to interact with the background app" border="0" data-original-height="920" data-original-width="1228" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiKB-vt3k1oWC8dnOgKzw3mthZikPMXJnYOwbL01KoivsRt69r98CeEjTv0TeAFjfCHdCx6WoOaoXiDECWg5EHgYoUjxQxQTm9aFaSK-AyUFb6w6EyASeQiM2RVfJgm5mgw6haiQYbspQuOQlcTlYcVFo709bmtC2skBgSA9XZJpvhoPDViNTxOkaDQ6IUD/s16000/Minimixed%20Custom%20Tabs.gif" /></a></div><br /><p style="text-align: center;"><br /></p> <h3 style="text-align: left;"> How to get started </h3> <p> Because this change happens at the browser level, developers who use Chrome Custom Tabs will see this change automatically applied starting with Chrome version M124. End users will see the Minimize icon in the Chrome Custom Tab toolbar. </p> <p> Please note that this is a change in Chrome, and we hope other browsers will adopt similar functionality. </p> <p><i> Posted by Victor Gallet, Senior Product Manager </i></p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </noscript> </div> </div> <div class='share'> <span class='twitter-custom social-wrapper' data-href='http://twitter.com/share?text=Chromium Blog:Multi-tasking with Minimized Custom Tabs&url=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/multi-tasking-with-minimized-custom-tabs.html&via=ChromiumDev'> <img alt='Share on Twitter' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_twitter_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> <span class='fb-custom social-wrapper' data-href='https://www.facebook.com/sharer.php?u=https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/multi-tasking-with-minimized-custom-tabs.html'> <img alt='Share on Facebook' height='24' src='https://www.gstatic.com/images/icons/material/system/2x/post_facebook_black_24dp.png' width='24'/> </span> </div> <div class='post-footer'> <div class='cmt_iframe_holder' data-href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/multi-tasking-with-minimized-custom-tabs.html' data-viewtype='FILTERED_POSTMOD'></div> <a href='https://plus.google.com/112374322230920073195' rel='author' style='display:none;'> Google </a> <div class='label-footer'> </div> </div> </div> <div class='post' data-id='3770039990353380888' itemscope='' itemtype='http://schema.org/BlogPosting'> <h2 class='title' itemprop='name'> <a href='https://blog.chromium.org/2024/05/advancing-our-amazing-bet-on-asymmetric.html' itemprop='url' title='Advancing Our Amazing Bet on Asymmetric Cryptography'> Advancing Our Amazing Bet on Asymmetric Cryptography </a> </h2> <div class='post-header'> <div class='published'> <span class='publishdate' itemprop='datePublished'> Thursday, May 23, 2024 </span> </div> </div> <div class='post-body'> <div class='post-content' itemprop='articleBody'> <script type='text/template'> <span id="docs-internal-guid-f8bc9dc7-7fff-f0d8-2adc-75b663a17b8a"><p dir="ltr" style="line-height: 1.38; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt;"><br /></p></span> <p> Google and many other organizations, such as <a href="https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/post-quantum-cryptography">NIST</a>, <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/tls/about/">IETF</a>, and <a href="https://www.nsa.gov/Press-Room/News-Highlights/Article/Article/3148990/nsa-releases-future-quantum-resistant-qr-algorithm-requirements-for-national-se/">NSA</a>, believe that migrating to post-quantum cryptography is important due to the large risk posed by a <a href="https://media.defense.gov/2021/Aug/04/2002821837/-1/-1/1/Quantum_FAQs_20210804.PDF">cryptographically-relevant quantum computer</a> (CRQC). In <a href="https://blog.chromium.org/2023/08/protecting-chrome-traffic-with-hybrid.html">August</a>, we posted about how Chrome Security is working to protect users from the risk of future quantum computers by leveraging a new form of <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-tls-westerbaan-xyber768d00/">hybrid post-quantum cryptographic key </a>exchange, Kyber (ML-KEM)<sup id="fnref1"><a href="#fn1" rel="footnote">1</a></sup>. We’re happy to announce that we have enabled the latest Kyber draft specification by default for TLS 1.3 and QUIC on all desktop Chrome platforms as of Chrome 124.<sup id="fnref2"><a href="#fn2" rel="footnote">2</a></sup> This rollout revealed a number of previously-existing bugs in several TLS middlebox products. To assist with the deployment of fixes, Chrome is offering a temporary <a href="https://chromeenterprise.google/policies/#PostQuantumKeyAgreementEnabled">enterprise policy to opt-out</a>. </p> <p> Launching opportunistic quantum-resistant key exchange is part of <a href="https://bughunters.google.com/blog/5108747984306176/google-s-threat-model-for-post-quantum-cryptography">Google’s broader strategy</a> to prioritize deploying post-quantum cryptography in systems <em>today</em> that are at risk if an adversary has access to a quantum computer <em>in the future</em>. We believe that it’s important to inform standards with real-world experience, by implementing drafts and iterating based on feedback from implementers and early adopters. This iterative approach was a key part of developing QUIC and TLS 1.3. It’s part of why we’re launching this draft version of Kyber, and it informs our future plans for post-quantum cryptography. </p> <p> Chrome’s post-quantum strategy prioritizes quantum-resistant key exchange in HTTPS, and increased <a href="https://www.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/root-ca-policy/moving-forward-together/">agility</a> in certificates from the Web PKI. While PKI agility may appear somewhat unrelated, its absence has contributed to significant delays in past cryptographic transitions and will continue to do so until we find a viable solution in this space. A more agile Web PKI is required to enable a secure and reliable transition to post-quantum cryptography on the web. </p> <p> To understand this, let’s take a look at HTTPS and the current state of post-quantum cryptography. In the context of HTTPS, cryptography is primarily used in three different ways: </p> <ul> <li><strong>Symmetric Encryption/Decryption.</strong> HTTP is transmitted as data inside a TLS connection using an authenticated cipher (AEAD) such as AES-GCM. These algorithms are <a href="https://words.filippo.io/dispatches/post-quantum-age/">broadly considered safe</a> against quantum cryptanalysis and can remain in place. </li><li><strong>Key Exchange.</strong> Symmetric cryptography requires a secret key. Key exchange is a form of asymmetric cryptography in which two parties can mutually generate a shared secret key over a public channel. This secret key can then be used for symmetric encryption and decryption. All current forms of asymmetric key exchange standardized for use in TLS are vulnerable to quantum cryptanalysis. </li><li><strong>Authentication</strong>. In HTTPS, authentication is achieved primarily through the use of digital signatures, which are used to convey server identity, handshake authentication, and transparency for certificate issuance. All of the digital signature and public key algorithms standardized for authentication in TLS are vulnerable to quantum cryptanalysis. </li> </ul> <p> This results in two separate quantum threats to HTTPS. </p> <p> The first is the threat to traffic being generated <em>today</em>. An adversary could store encrypted traffic now, wait for a CRQC to be practical, and then use it to decrypt the traffic after the fact. This is commonly known as a <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvest_now,_decrypt_later">store-now-decrypt-later</a> attack. This threat is relatively urgent, since it doesn’t matter when a CRQC is practical—the threat comes from storing encrypted data <em>now</em>. Defending against this attack requires the key exchange to be quantum resistant. Launching Kyber in Chrome enables servers to mitigate store-now-decrypt-later attacks. </p> <p> The second threat is that <em>future</em> traffic is vulnerable to impersonation by a quantum computer. Once a CRQC actually exists, it could be used to break the asymmetric cryptography used for authentication in HTTPS. To defend against impersonation from a CRQC, we need to migrate all of the asymmetric cryptography used for authentication to post-quantum variants. However, breaking authentication only affects traffic generated <strong>after</strong> the availability of CRQCs. This is because breaking authentication on a recorded transcript doesn’t help the attacker impersonate either party—the conversation has already finished. </p> <p> In other words, there’s no store-now-decrypt-later equivalent for authentication, and so while migrating key exchange and authentication to post-quantum variants are both <em>important</em>, migrating authentication is less <em>urgent</em> than key exchange. This is good, because there are a <a href="https://dadrian.io/blog/posts/pqc-signatures-2024/">variety of challenges</a> for migrating to post-quantum authentication. Specifically, size. </p> <p> Post-quantum cryptography is big compared to the pre-quantum cryptographic algorithms used in HTTPS. A Kyber key exchange is ~1KB transmitted per peer, whereas an X25519 key exchange is only 32 bytes per peer, an over 30x increase. The actual key exchange operation in Kyber is quite fast. Transmitting Kyber keys is quite slow. The extra size from Kyber causes the TLS ClientHello to be split into two packets, resulting in a 4% median latency increase to all TLS handshakes in Chrome on desktop. On desktop platforms, this, with HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 connection reuse, is not large enough to be noticeable in <a href="https://web.dev/articles/vitals">Core Web Vitals</a>. Unfortunately, it is noticeable on Android, where Internet connections are often lower bandwidth and higher latency, and so we have not yet launched on Android. </p> <p> The size issues are even worse for authentication. ML-DSA (Dilithium) keys and signatures are ~40X the size of ECDSA keys and signatures. A typical TLS connection today uses two public keys and five signatures to fulfill all of the authentication requirements. A naive swap to ML-DSA would add ~14KB to the TLS handshake. <a href="https://blog.cloudflare.com/pq-2024">Cloudflare anticipates</a> it would increase latency by 20-40%, and we’ve seen that a single kilobyte was already impactful. Instead, we need alternate approaches to authentication in HTTPS that provide the desired properties and transmit fewer signatures and public keys. </p> <p> </p> <p> We think the important next step for quantum-resistant authentication in HTTPS is to focus on enabling <em>trust anchor agility</em>. Historically, the public Web PKI could not deploy new algorithms quickly. This is because most site operators typically provision a single certificate for all supported clients and browsers. This certificate must both be issued from a trust hierarchy that is trusted by every browser or client the site operator supports, and the certificate must be compatible with each of these clients. </p> <p> The single certificate model makes it difficult for the Web PKI to evolve. As security requirements change, site operators may find that there is no longer an intersection between certificates trusted by deployed clients, certificates trusted by new clients, algorithms supported by deployed clients, and algorithms supported by new clients (all crossed with every separate browser and root store). These clients may range from different browsers, older versions of those browsers not receiving updates, all the way to applications on smart TVs or payment terminals. As requirements diverge, site operators have to choose between security for new clients, and compatibility with older clients. </p> <p> This conflict, in turn, limits new clients making PKI changes to improve user security, such as transitioning to post-quantum. Under a single-certificate deployment model, the newest clients cannot diverge too far from the oldest clients, or server operators will be left with no way to maintain compatibility. We propose to solve this by moving to a <em>multi-certificate deployment model</em>, where servers may be provisioned with multiple certificates, and automatically send the correct one to each client. This enables trust anchor agility, and allows clients to evolve at different rates. Clients who are up to date and reliably receiving updates could access the authentication mechanisms best suited for the Internet as it evolves without being hamstrung by old clients no longer receiving updates. Certification authorities and trust stores could introduce new post-quantum trust anchors without needing to wait for the slowest actor to add support. This would drastically simplify the post-quantum transition since it also enables the seamless addition and removal of hierarchies using experimental post-quantum authentication methods. </p> <p> At first glance, TLS may appear to have trust anchor agility by way of <em>cross-signatures</em> and <em>signature algorithm negotiation</em>. However, neither of these mechanisms provide true trust anchor agility, nor were they intended to. </p> <p> A cross-signature is when a CA creates two different certificates for a single subject and public key pair, but with different issuers and signatures. The first certificate is issued and signed as usual, by the CA itself. The second is issued and signed by a different trust hierarchy, often by a different organization. For example, the original Let’s Encrypt intermediate certificate <a href="https://letsencrypt.org/2023/07/10/cross-sign-expiration.html">existed in two forms</a><sup id="fnref3"><a href="#fn3" rel="footnote">3</a></sup>. The “regular” intermediate was signed by the Let’s Encrypt root, whereas the “cross-signed” intermediate was signed by IdenTrust. This approach of cross-signing a new PKI hierarchy with an older, more broadly available PKI hierarchy allows a new CA to bootstrap its trust on old devices, so long as the older devices support the signing algorithm. Cross-signatures, however, rely on significant cooperation among often competing CAs, and may not be suitable for when different clients have different needs. This limits when site operators can use cross-signs. Additionally, devices that do not support a new algorithm will still need to be updated to be able to use the new signing algorithm in the newer certificate, regardless of whether or not it is cross-signed. </p> <p> Signature algorithm negotiation allows TLS peers to agree on the algorithm to be used for the handshake signature. This algorithm needs to correspond with the key type used in the certificate. Endpoints can infer that if the peer supports an algorithm such as ECDSA for the handshake signature, it must also support ECDSA certificates. This value can be used to multiplex between an RSA-based chain and a smaller ECDSA-based chain. For example, Google’s RSA-based large compatibility chain is four certificates and ~4.1KB, whereas the shortest ECDSA-based chain is three certificates and only ~1.7KB<sup id="fnref4"><a href="#fn4" rel="footnote">4</a></sup>. </p> <p> Signature algorithm negotiation does not provide trust anchor agility. While the signature algorithm information implies algorithm support, it provides no information about what trust anchors a client actually trusts. A client can support ECDSA, but not have the latest ECDSA root certificate from a specific CA. Due to the wide variety of trust stores in use, many organizations may still often need to be conservative in when they serve ECDSA certificates and may need to provide a longer, cross-signed chain for maximum compatibility. </p> <p> Neither cross-signatures nor signature algorithm negotiation are solutions to migrating to post-quantum cryptography for authentication. Cross-signatures do not help with new algorithms, and signature algorithm negotiation is solely about negotiating algorithms, not providing information about trust anchors. We expect a gradual transition to post-quantum cryptography. Inferring information about the contents of the trust store from the result of signature algorithm negotiation risks ossifying to a specific version of a specific trust store, rather than purely being used for algorithm negotiation. </p> <p> Instead, to introduce agility to TLS we need an explicit mechanism for <em>trust anchor negotiation</em>, to allow the client and server to efficiently determine which certificate to use. At the November 2023 IETF meeting in Prague, Chrome proposed “<a href="https://github.com/davidben/tls-trust-expressions">Trust Expressions</a>” as a mechanism for trust anchor negotiation in TLS. Chrome is currently seeking community input on Trust Expressions via the IETF process. We think the goal of being able to cleanly deploy multiple certificates to handle a range of clients is much more important than the specific mechanisms of the proposal. </p> <p> From there, we can explore more efficient ways to authenticate servers, such as <a href="https://github.com/davidben/merkle-tree-certs">Merkle Tree Certificates</a>. We view introducing some mechanism for trust anchor agility as a necessity for efficient post-quantum authentication. Experimentation will be extremely important as proposals are developed. Agility also enables using different solutions in different contexts, rather than sending extra data for the lowest-common denominator— solutions like Merkle Tree Certificates and <a href="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-davidben-tls-trust-expr-02.html#name-intermediate-elision">intermediate elision</a> require up-to-date clients. </p> <p> Given these constraints, priorities, and <a href="https://dadrian.io/blog/posts/pqc-not-plaintext/">risks</a>, we think agility is more important than defining exactly what a post-quantum PKI will look like at this time. We recommend against <em>immediately</em> standardizing ML-DSA in X.509 for use in the <em>public</em> Web PKI via the <a href="https://cabforum.org/">CA/Browser Forum</a>. We expect that ML-DSA, once NIST completes standardization, will play a part in a post-quantum Web PKI, but we’re focusing on agility first. This does not preclude introducing ML-DSA in X.509 as an option for private PKIs, which may be operating on more strict post-quantum timelines and have fewer constraints around certificate size, handshake latency, issuance transparency, and unmanaged endpoints. </p> <p> Ultimately, we think that any approach to post-quantum authentication has the same first requirement—a migration mechanism for clients to opt-in to post-quantum secure authentication mechanisms when servers support it. Post-quantum authentication presents significant challenges to the Web ecosystem, but we believe trust anchor agility will enable us to overcome them and lead to a more secure, robust, and performant post-quantum web. </p> <!--Footnotes themselves at the bottom.--> <h2>Notes</h2> <div class="footnotes"> <hr /> <ol><li id="fn1"> <p> The draft is X25519Kyber768, which is a combination of the pre-quantum algorithm X25519, and the post-quantum algorithm Kyber 768. Kyber is being renamed to ML-KEM, however for the purposes of this post, we will use “Kyber” to refer to the hybrid algorithm defined for TLS. <a href="#fnref1" rev="footnote">↩</a></p></li><li id="fn2"> <p> As the standards from NIST and IETF are not yet complete, this will be later removed and replaced with the final versions. At this stage of standardization, we expect only early adopters to use the primitives. <a href="#fnref2" rev="footnote">↩</a></p></li><li id="fn3"> <p> It actually exists in considerably more than two forms, but from an organizational perspective, there are versions that signed by other Let’s Encrypt certificates, and a version that is signed by IdenTrust, which is a completely separate certification authority from Let’s Encrypt. <a href="#fnref3" rev="footnote">↩</a></p></li><li id="fn4"> <p> The chain length includes the root certificate and leaf certificate. The byte numbers are what is transmitted over the wire, and so they include the leaf certificate but not the root certificate. <a href="#fnref4" rev="footnote">↩</a> </p></li><p></p><p></p><p></p></ol></div> <p><i> Posted by David Adrian, Bob Beck, David Benjamin and Devon O'Brien </i></p> <span itemprop='author' itemscope='itemscope' itemtype='http://schema.org/Person'> <meta content='https://plus.google.com/116899029375914044550' itemprop='url'/> </span> </script> <noscript> <span id="docs-internal-guid-f8bc9dc7-7fff-f0d8-2adc-75b663a17b8a"><p dir="ltr" style="line-height: 1.38; margin-bottom: 0pt; margin-top: 0pt;"><br /></p></span> <p> Google and many other organizations, such as <a href="https://csrc.nist.gov/projects/post-quantum-cryptography">NIST</a>, <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/tls/about/">IETF</a>, and <a href="https://www.nsa.gov/Press-Room/News-Highlights/Article/Article/3148990/nsa-releases-future-quantum-resistant-qr-algorithm-requirements-for-national-se/">NSA</a>, believe that migrating to post-quantum cryptography is important due to the large risk posed by a <a href="https://media.defense.gov/2021/Aug/04/2002821837/-1/-1/1/Quantum_FAQs_20210804.PDF">cryptographically-relevant quantum computer</a> (CRQC). In <a href="https://blog.chromium.org/2023/08/protecting-chrome-traffic-with-hybrid.html">August</a>, we posted about how Chrome Security is working to protect users from the risk of future quantum computers by leveraging a new form of <a href="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-tls-westerbaan-xyber768d00/">hybrid post-quantum cryptographic key </a>exchange, Kyber (ML-KEM)<sup id="fnref1"><a href="#fn1" rel="footnote">1</a></sup>. We’re happy to announce that we have enabled the latest Kyber draft specification by default for TLS 1.3 and QUIC on all desktop Chrome platforms as of Chrome 124.<sup id="fnref2"><a href="#fn2" rel="footnote">2</a></sup> This rollout revealed a number of previously-existing bugs in several TLS middlebox products. To assist with the deployment of fixes, Chrome is offering a temporary <a href="https://chromeenterprise.google/policies/#PostQuantumKeyAgreementEnabled">enterprise policy to opt-out</a>. </p> <p> Launching opportunistic quantum-resistant key exchange is part of <a href="https://bughunters.google.com/blog/5108747984306176/google-s-threat-model-for-post-quantum-cryptography">Google’s broader strategy</a> to prioritize deploying post-quantum cryptography in systems <em>today</em> that are at risk if an adversary has access to a quantum computer <em>in the future</em>. We believe that it’s important to inform standards with real-world experience, by implementing drafts and iterating based on feedback from implementers and early adopters. This iterative approach was a key part of developing QUIC and TLS 1.3. It’s part of why we’re launching this draft version of Kyber, and it informs our future plans for post-quantum cryptography. </p> <p> Chrome’s post-quantum strategy prioritizes quantum-resistant key exchange in HTTPS, and increased <a href="https://www.chromium.org/Home/chromium-security/root-ca-policy/moving-forward-together/">agility</a> in certificates from the Web PKI. While PKI agility may appear somewhat unrelated, its absence has contributed to significant delays in past cryptographic transitions and will continue to do so until we find a viable solution in this space. A more agile Web PKI is required to enable a secure and reliable transition to post-quantum cryptography on the web. </p> <p> To understand this, let’s take a look at HTTPS and the current state of post-quantum cryptography. In the context of HTTPS, cryptography is primarily used in three different ways: </p> <ul> <li><strong>Symmetric Encryption/Decryption.</strong> HTTP is transmitted as data inside a TLS connection using an authenticated cipher (AEAD) such as AES-GCM. These algorithms are <a href="https://words.filippo.io/dispatches/post-quantum-age/">broadly considered safe</a> against quantum cryptanalysis and can remain in place. </li><li><strong>Key Exchange.</strong> Symmetric cryptography requires a secret key. Key exchange is a form of asymmetric cryptography in which two parties can mutually generate a shared secret key over a public channel. This secret key can then be used for symmetric encryption and decryption. All current forms of asymmetric key exchange standardized for use in TLS are vulnerable to quantum cryptanalysis. </li><li><strong>Authentication</strong>. In HTTPS, authentication is achieved primarily through the use of digital signatures, which are used to convey server identity, handshake authentication, and transparency for certificate issuance. All of the digital signature and public key algorithms standardized for authentication in TLS are vulnerable to quantum cryptanalysis. </li> </ul> <p> This results in two separate quantum threats to HTTPS. </p> <p> The first is the threat to traffic being generated <em>today</em>. An adversary could store encrypted traffic now, wait for a CRQC to be practical, and then use it to decrypt the traffic after the fact. This is commonly known as a <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harvest_now,_decrypt_later">store-now-decrypt-later</a> attack. This threat is relatively urgent, since it doesn’t matter when a CRQC is practical—the threat comes from storing encrypted data <em>now</em>. Defending against this attack requires the key exchange to be quantum resistant. Launching Kyber in Chrome enables servers to mitigate store-now-decrypt-later attacks. </p> <p> The second threat is that <em>future</em> traffic is vulnerable to impersonation by a quantum computer. Once a CRQC actually exists, it could be used to break the asymmetric cryptography used for authentication in HTTPS. To defend against impersonation from a CRQC, we need to migrate all of the asymmetric cryptography used for authentication to post-quantum variants. However, breaking authentication only affects traffic generated <strong>after</strong> the availability of CRQCs. This is because breaking authentication on a recorded transcript doesn’t help the attacker impersonate either party—the conversation has already finished. </p> <p> In other words, there’s no store-now-decrypt-later equivalent for authentication, and so while migrating key exchange and authentication to post-quantum variants are both <em>important</em>, migrating authentication is less <em>urgent</em> than key exchange. This is good, because there are a <a href="https://dadrian.io/blog/posts/pqc-signatures-2024/">variety of challenges</a> for migrating to post-quantum authentication. Specifically, size. </p> <p> Post-quantum cryptography is big compared to the pre-quantum cryptographic algorithms used in HTTPS. A Kyber key exchange is ~1KB transmitted per peer, whereas an X25519 key exchange is only 32 bytes per peer, an over 30x increase. The actual key exchange operation in Kyber is quite fast. Transmitting Kyber keys is quite slow. The extra size from Kyber causes the TLS ClientHello to be split into two packets, resulting in a 4% median latency increase to all TLS handshakes in Chrome on desktop. On desktop platforms, this, with HTTP/2 and HTTP/3 connection reuse, is not large enough to be noticeable in <a href="https://web.dev/articles/vitals">Core Web Vitals</a>. Unfortunately, it is noticeable on Android, where Internet connections are often lower bandwidth and higher latency, and so we have not yet launched on Android. </p> <p> The size issues are even worse for authentication. ML-DSA (Dilithium) keys and signatures are ~40X the size of ECDSA keys and signatures. A typical TLS connection today uses two public keys and five signatures to fulfill all of the authentication requirements. A naive swap to ML-DSA would add ~14KB to the TLS handshake. <a href="https://blog.cloudflare.com/pq-2024">Cloudflare anticipates</a> it would increase latency by 20-40%, and we’ve seen that a single kilobyte was already impactful. Instead, we need alternate approaches to authentication in HTTPS that provide the desired properties and transmit fewer signatures and public keys. </p> <p> </p> <p> We think the important next step for quantum-resistant authentication in HTTPS is to focus on enabling <em>trust anchor agility</em>. Historically, the public Web PKI could not deploy new algorithms quickly. This is because most site operators typically provision a single certificate for all supported clients and browsers. This certificate must both be issued from a trust hierarchy that is trusted by every browser or client the site operator supports, and the certificate must be compatible with each of these clients. </p> <p> The single certificate model makes it difficult for the Web PKI to evolve. As security requirements change, site operators may find that there is no longer an intersection between certificates trusted by deployed clients, certificates trusted by new clients, algorithms supported by deployed clients, and algorithms supported by new clients (all crossed with every separate browser and root store). These clients may range from different browsers, older versions of those browsers not receiving updates, all the way to applications on smart TVs or payment terminals. As requirements diverge, site operators have to choose between security for new clients, and compatibility with older clients. </p> <p> This conflict, in turn, limits new clients making PKI changes to improve user security, such as transitioning to post-quantum. Under a single-certificate deployment model, the newest clients cannot diverge too far from the oldest clients, or server operators will be left with no way to maintain compatibility. We propose to solve this by moving to a <em>multi-certificate deployment model</em>, where servers may be provisioned with multiple certificates, and automatically send the correct one to each client. This enables trust anchor agility, and allows clients to evolve at different rates. Clients who are up to date and reliably receiving updates could access the authentication mechanisms best suited for the Internet as it evolves without being hamstrung by old clients no longer receiving updates. Certification authorities and trust stores could introduce new post-quantum trust anchors without needing to wait for the slowest actor to add support. This would drastically simplify the post-quantum transition since it also enables the seamless addition and removal of hierarchies using experimental post-quantum authentication methods. </p> <p> At first glance, TLS may appear to have trust anchor agility by way of <em>cross-signatures</em> and <em>signature algorithm negotiation</em>. However, neither of these mechanisms provide true trust anchor agility, nor were they intended to. </p> <p> A cross-signature is when a CA creates two different certificates for a single subject and public key pair, but with different issuers and signatures. The first certificate is issued and signed as usual, by the CA itself. The second is issued and signed by a different trust hierarchy, often by a different organization. For example, the original Let’s Encrypt intermediate certificate <a href="https://letsencrypt.org/2023/07/10/cross-sign-expiration.html">existed in two forms</a><sup id="fnref3"><a href="#fn3" rel="footnote">3</a></sup>. The “regular” intermediate was signed by the Let’s Encrypt root, whereas the “cross-signed” intermediate was signed by IdenTrust. This approach of cross-signing a new PKI hierarchy with an older, more broadly available PKI hierarchy allows a new CA to bootstrap its trust on old devices, so long as the older devices support the signing algorithm. Cross-signatures, however, rely on significant cooperation among often competing CAs, and may not be suitable for when different clients have different needs. This limits when site operators can use cross-signs. Additionally, devices that do not support a new algorithm will still need to be updated to be able to use the new signing algorithm in the newer certificate, regardless of whether or not it is cross-signed. </p> <p> Signature algorithm negotiation allows TLS peers to agree on the algorithm to be used for the handshake signature. This algorithm needs to correspond with the key type used in the certificate. Endpoints can infer that if the peer supports an algorithm such as ECDSA for the handshake signature, it must also support ECDSA certificates. This value can be used to multiplex between an RSA-based chain and a smaller ECDSA-based chain. For example, Google’s RSA-based large compatibility chain is four certificates and ~4.1KB, whereas the shortest ECDSA-based chain is three certificates and only ~1.7KB<sup id="fnref4"><a href="#fn4" rel="footnote">4</a></sup>. </p> <p> Signature algorithm negotiation does not provide trust anchor agility. While the signature algorithm information implies algorithm support, it provides no information about what trust anchors a client actually trusts. A client can support ECDSA, but not have the latest ECDSA root certificate from a specific CA. Due to the wide variety of trust stores in use, many organizations may still often need to be conservative in when they serve ECDSA certificates and may need to provide a longer, cross-signed chain for maximum compatibility. </p> <p> Neither cross-signatures nor signature algorithm negotiation are solutions to migrating to post-quantum cryptography for authentication. Cross-signatures do not help with new algorithms, and signature algorithm negotiation is solely about negotiating algorithms, not providing information about trust anchors. We expect a gradual transition to post-quantum cryptography. Inferring information about the contents of the trust store from the result of signature algorithm negotiation risks ossifying to a specific version of a specific trust store, rather than purely being used for algorithm negotiation. </p> <p> Instead, to introduce agility to TLS we need an explicit mechanism for <em>trust anchor negotiation</em>, to allow the client and server to efficiently determine which certificate to use. At the November 2023 IETF meeting in Prague, Chrome proposed “<a href="https://github.com/davidben/tls-trust-expressions">Trust Expressions</a>” as a mechanism for trust anchor negotiation in TLS. Chrome is currently seeking community input on Trust Expressions via the IETF process. We think the goal of being able to cleanly deploy multiple certificates to handle a range of clients is much more important than the specific mechanisms of the proposal. </p> <p> From there, we can explore more efficient ways to authenticate servers, such as <a href="https://github.com/davidben/merkle-tree-certs">Merkle Tree Certificates</a>. We view introducing some mechanism for trust anchor agility as a necessity for efficient post-quantum authentication. Experimentation will be extremely important as proposals are developed. Agility also enables using different solutions in different contexts, rather than sending extra data for the lowest-common denominator— solutions like Merkle Tree Certificates and <a href="https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-davidben-tls-trust-expr-02.html#name-intermediate-elision">intermediate elision</a> require up-to-date clients. </p> <p> Given these constraints, priorities, and <a href="https://dadrian.io/blog/posts/pqc-not-plaintext/">risks</a>, we think agility is more important than defining exactly what a post-quantum PKI will look like at this time. We recommend against <em>immediately</em> standardizing ML-DSA in X.509 for use in the <em>public</em> Web PKI via the <a href="https://cabforum.org/">CA/Browser Forum</a>. We expect that ML-DSA, once NIST completes standardization, will play a part in a post-quantum Web PKI, but we’re focusing on agility first. This does not preclude introducing ML-DSA in X.509 as an option for private PKIs, which may be operating on more strict post-quantum timelines and have fewer constraints around certificate size, handshake latency, issuance transparency, and unmanaged endpoints. </p> <p> Ultimately, we think that any approach to post-quantum authentication has the same first requirement—a migration mechanism for clients to opt-in to post-quantum secure authentication mechanisms when servers support it. Post-quantum authentication presents significant challenges to the Web ecosystem, but we believe trust anchor agility will enable us to overcome them and lead to a more secure, robust, and performant post-quantum web. </p> <!--Footnotes themselves at the bottom.--> <h2>Notes</h2> <div class="footnotes"> <hr /> <ol><li id="fn1"> <p> The draft is X25519Kyber768, which is a combination of the pre-quantum algorithm X25519, and the post-quantum algorithm Kyber 768. Kyber is being renamed to ML-KEM, however for the purposes of this post, we will use “Kyber” to refer to the hybrid algorithm defined for TLS. <a href="#fnref1" rev="footnote">↩</a></p></li><li id="fn2"> <p> As the standards from NIST and IETF are not yet complete, this will be later removed and replaced with the final versions. At this stage of standardization, we expect only early adopters to use the primitives. <a href="#fnref2" rev="footnote">↩</a></p></li><li id="fn3"> <p> It actually exists in considerably more than two forms, but from an organizational perspective, there are versions that signed by other Let’s Encrypt certificates, and a version that is signed by IdenTrust, which is a completely separate certification authority from Let’s Encrypt. <a href="#fnref3" rev="footnote">↩</a></p></li><li id="fn4"> <p> The chain length includes the root certificate and leaf certificate. 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dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/frameworks'> frameworks </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/fugu'> fugu </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/fund'> fund </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/funding'> funding </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/gdd'> gdd </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/google%20earth'> google earth </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/google%20event'> google event </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/google%20io%202019'> google io 2019 </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/google%20web%20developer'> google web developer </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/googlechrome'> googlechrome </a> <span dir='ltr'> 12 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/harmful%20ads'> harmful ads </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/html5'> html5 </a> <span dir='ltr'> 11 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/HTTP%2F3'> HTTP/3 </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/HTTPS'> HTTPS </a> <span dir='ltr'> 4 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/iframes'> iframes </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/images'> images </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/incognito'> incognito </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/insecure%20forms'> insecure forms </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/intent%20to%20explain'> intent to explain </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/ios'> ios </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/ios%20Chrome'> ios Chrome </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/issue%20tracker'> issue tracker </a> <span dir='ltr'> 3 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/jank'> jank </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/javascript'> javascript </a> <span dir='ltr'> 5 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/lab%20data'> lab data </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/labelling'> labelling </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/largest%20contentful%20paint'> largest contentful paint </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/launch'> launch </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/lazy-loading'> lazy-loading </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/lighthouse'> lighthouse </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/linux'> linux </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/Lite%20Mode'> Lite Mode </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/Lite%20pages'> Lite pages </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/loading%20interventions'> loading interventions </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/loading%20optimizations'> loading optimizations </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/lock%20icon'> lock icon </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/long-tail'> long-tail </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/mac'> mac </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/manifest%20v3'> manifest v3 </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/metrics'> metrics </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/microsoft%20edge'> microsoft edge </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/mixed%20forms'> mixed forms </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/mobile'> mobile </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/na'> na </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/native%20client'> native client </a> <span dir='ltr'> 8 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/native%20file%20system'> native file system </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/New%20Features'> New Features </a> <span dir='ltr'> 5 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/notifications'> notifications </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/octane'> octane </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/open%20web'> open web </a> <span dir='ltr'> 4 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/origin%20trials'> origin trials </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/pagespeed%20insights'> pagespeed insights </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/pagespeedinsights'> pagespeedinsights </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/passwords'> passwords </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/payment%20handler'> payment handler </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/payment%20request'> payment request </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/payments'> payments </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/performance'> performance </a> <span dir='ltr'> 20 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/performance%20tools'> performance tools </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/permission%20UI'> permission UI </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/permissions'> permissions </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/play%20store'> play store </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/portals'> portals </a> <span dir='ltr'> 3 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/prefetching'> prefetching </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/privacy'> privacy </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/privacy%20sandbox'> privacy sandbox </a> <span dir='ltr'> 4 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/private%20prefetch%20proxy'> private prefetch proxy </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/profile%20guided%20optimization'> profile guided optimization </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/progressive%20web%20apps'> progressive web apps </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/Project%20Strobe'> Project Strobe </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/protection'> protection </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/pwa'> pwa </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/QUIC'> QUIC </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/quieter%20permissions'> quieter permissions </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/releases'> releases </a> <span dir='ltr'> 3 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/removals'> removals </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/rlz'> rlz </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/root%20program'> root program </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/safe%20browsing'> safe browsing </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/Secure%20DNS'> Secure DNS </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/security'> security </a> <span dir='ltr'> 36 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/site%20isolation'> site isolation </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/slow%20loading'> slow loading </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/sms%20receiver'> sms receiver </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/spam%20policy'> spam policy </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/spdy'> spdy </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/spectre'> spectre </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/speed'> speed </a> <span dir='ltr'> 4 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/ssl'> ssl </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/store%20listing'> store listing </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/strobe'> strobe </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/subscription%20pages'> subscription pages </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/suspicious%20site%20reporter%20extension'> suspicious site reporter extension </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/TCP'> TCP </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/the%20fast%20and%20the%20curious'> the fast and the curious </a> <span dir='ltr'> 23 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/TLS'> TLS </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/tools'> tools </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/tracing'> tracing </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/transparency'> transparency </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/trusted%20web%20activities'> trusted web activities </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/twa'> twa </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/user%20agent%20string'> user agent string </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/user%20data%20policy'> user data policy </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/v8'> v8 </a> <span dir='ltr'> 6 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/video'> video </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/wasm'> wasm </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web'> web </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20apps'> web apps </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20assembly'> web assembly </a> <span dir='ltr'> 2 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20developers'> web developers </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20intents'> web intents </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20packaging'> web packaging </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20payments'> web payments </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20platform'> web platform </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20request%20api'> web request api </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web%20vitals'> web vitals </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web.dev'> web.dev </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/web.dev%20live'> web.dev live </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webapi'> webapi </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webassembly'> webassembly </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webaudio'> webaudio </a> <span dir='ltr'> 3 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webgl'> webgl </a> <span dir='ltr'> 7 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webkit'> webkit </a> <span dir='ltr'> 5 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/WebM'> WebM </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webmaster'> webmaster </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webp'> webp </a> <span dir='ltr'> 5 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webrtc'> webrtc </a> <span dir='ltr'> 6 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/websockets'> websockets </a> <span dir='ltr'> 5 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/webtiming'> webtiming </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/writable-files'> writable-files </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> <li> <a dir='ltr' href='https://blog.chromium.org/search/label/yerba%20beuna%20center%20for%20the%20arts'> yerba beuna center for the arts </a> <span dir='ltr'> 1 </span> </li> </ul> <div class='clear'></div> </div> </div><div class='widget BlogArchive' 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href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/09/'> Sep </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/08/'> Aug </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/07/'> Jul </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/06/'> Jun </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/05/'> May </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/04/'> Apr </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/03/'> Mar </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/02/'> Feb </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2019/01/'> Jan </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class='intervalToggle'> <span class='new-toggle' href='javascript:void(0)'> <i class='material-icons arrow'>  </i> </span> <a class='toggle' href='javascript:void(0)' style='display: none'> <span class='zippy'> <i 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<div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/08/'> Aug </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/07/'> Jul </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/06/'> Jun </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/05/'> May </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/04/'> Apr </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/03/'> Mar </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/02/'> Feb </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2018/01/'> Jan </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class='intervalToggle'> <span class='new-toggle' href='javascript:void(0)'> <i class='material-icons arrow'>  </i> </span> <a class='toggle' href='javascript:void(0)' style='display: none'> <span class='zippy'> <i class='material-icons'>  </i>   </span> </a> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/'> 2017 </a> </div> <div class='items'> <ul class='hierarchy'> 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class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/07/'> Jul </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/06/'> Jun </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/05/'> May </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/04/'> Apr </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/03/'> Mar </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/02/'> Feb </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2017/01/'> Jan </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class='intervalToggle'> <span class='new-toggle' href='javascript:void(0)'> <i class='material-icons arrow'>  </i> </span> <a class='toggle' href='javascript:void(0)' style='display: none'> <span class='zippy'> <i class='material-icons'>  </i>   </span> </a> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2016/'> 2016 </a> </div> <div class='items'> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2016/12/'> Dec </a> </div> <div class='items'> 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class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2013/03/'> Mar </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2013/02/'> Feb </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class=''> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2013/01/'> Jan </a> </div> <div class='items'> </div> </li> </ul> </div> </li> </ul> <ul class='hierarchy'> <li class='archivedate collapsed'> <div class='intervalToggle'> <span class='new-toggle' href='javascript:void(0)'> <i class='material-icons arrow'>  </i> </span> <a class='toggle' href='javascript:void(0)' style='display: none'> <span class='zippy'> <i class='material-icons'>  </i>   </span> </a> <a class='post-count-link' href='https://blog.chromium.org/2012/'> 2012 </a> </div> <div class='items'> <ul class='hierarchy'> 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