Screen sharing,Watch Good Girls Bad Girls (1984) especially to a big audience, can be risky. Google has a new tool that could save people from themselves in this regard.
As spotted by Bleeping Computer, a new experimental flag has been added to Google Chrome that, if turned on, purports to automatically block "sensitive form fields" that include things like credit cards and passwords if the user is sharing or recording their screen from Android. Now, this feature is so experimental that it's not actually available to use yet, so it's impossible to say if it works or not. But, per Bleeping Computer, users of the Chrome Canary developer build should have access to it within the next month or so.
Ideally, you should really close any tabs with sensitive info in them beforeyou start rolling on a screen-share or screen recording session. But, if you don't, this new Chrome feature could save you from a lot of hassle. It should be noted that Chrome already blocks users from screen sharing or recording in an Incognito window, so in a sense, one protection from Incognito mode is coming over to the regular Chrome view.
It's always nice when technology actually solves a problem instead of just adding more problems.
Topics Google
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
NYT Connections hints and answers for February 1: Tips to solve 'Connections' #601.
Scenes from a Favela by The Paris Review
Redux: The Things between Me and Time by The Paris Review
Feminize Your Canon: Alice Dunbar
HP Touchscreen Laptop deal: Get $240 off at Best Buy
Building Character: Writing a Backstory for Our AI by Mariana Lin
The Ghosts of Newspaper Row by Elizabeth Mitchell
The Origins of Sprawl by Jason Diamond
Best free AI courses you can take online
How to live stream the New York Knicks in 2025
The Later Work of Dorothea Tanning by Craig Morgan Teicher
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。