Germany's Federal Office for Information Security says that Google's new browser Chrome "should not be used for surfing the Internet." The problem, according to a translation from Blogoscoped, is that joined with email and search, Chrome gives Google too much data about its users. The government also said Chrome should be avoided because its still.
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The ongoing internet browser war welcomes its new contestant: famous internet giant Google just released beta version of its upcoming internet browser, which is called Chrome. As said in 33-paged presentation, made like a comic book, Google Chrome is very different from any popular browser. It use WebKit engine (same as Safari's), and it was written from scratch to work flawlessly with complex content like JavaScript and modern web applications.
Grab the Google Chrome Channel Chooser from Google to keep up with the latest dev releases of Chrome as they're rolled out.
Google's Chrome Terms of Service originally out a royalty-free license for Google of any content submitted by users over the internet. Google responded within hours and made the necessary changes to all questionable language.
Google has announced plans to release an innovative new open source web browser. It will offer some revolutionary new features, including a process manager that will run each individual tab in an isolated process, much like a conventional operating system. There will also be integration with Google Gears (the engine for Google Docs).
Marc Andreessen, whose first startup, Netscape Communications, introduced the consumer web to millions thanks to its Netscape browser, seems to be suitably impressed by Google's recently released Chrome browser. He waxed eloquent about Chrome during an onstage conversation with Portfolio magazine contributing editor Kevin Maney at The Churchill Club in Palo Alto, Calif. Any desktop.