
Google has moved to Chrome 128 to its stable channel, which means it is now available. Among its new features, which you will find a little later in this article, one stands out that will improve user privacy: isolated web applications. It is well known that at least those on social networks collect a lot of information that they later use to create a profile with our preferences... although it is also well known that Google has its greatest source of income there...
In any case, you are not going to look the gift horse in the mouth. Without going any further, one of the reasons why I create web applications It is precisely that they are in an isolated profile, although that translates into an almost complete application with the weight that that entails. What comes now is the list with the most outstanding news Chrome 128.
Chrome 128 highlights
- Isolated Web Applications, which is an extension of PWA and Web Packaging facilities and will provide more security and protections.
- Support for standardized CSS zooming.
- New features for the Attribution Reportin API.
- CSS property support
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- The full list of changes is in your status page, where we also find explanatory links for each of them.
In the previous link we will also find information about what is in the beta and Dev channel, and we will see something that could motivate – possibly will in the future – a news of its own: support for 0.0.0.0 will be discontinued, CloudFlare's DNS with which you can browse anonymously. Depending on your version, it will be part of your PNA (Private Network Access) specification, a feature that is coming soon and can be bypassed using 0.0.0.0 as DNS. Of course, Google's 8.8.8.8 will still work.
Chrome 128 is now available from its official website and in the repositories available for Linux. They will also update soon the flatpak package.