Google Password Manager Is Fixing a Glaring Autofill Security Oversight

Summary
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Make sure it is to automatically do passwords: always use fingerprints, a face or other screen locking for additional protection.
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Access Chrome Settings> Google Password Manager to activate the added protective settings.
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Google Password Manager now requires additional verification before updating, addressing a previous security flaw.
No one likes manually signing websites, which is why Autofill has become such an important feature in many browsers. Google Chrome does it very well with the Google password manager, but there has always been a little safety surveillance. Fortunately, it was fixed on Android.
Previously, Google Chrome on Android automatically filled the user field and the password field when it appears on a web page that had a recorded connection. So it is appropriate that it was, what happens if you were not the one who uses your phone? Nothing prevents someone from signing in websites with your automatic recorded information. Obviously, it is a fairly large defect in the system.
Related
How to add Google Password Manager to your Android home screen
Google Password Manager allows you to manage passwords from different services and websites on Android, but access is not so simple – you must dig in your phone settings or the Chrome application. However, to make it quickly accessible, you can add it to your home screen.
A new parameter in the Google password manager allows you to activate additional protection which will require a fingerprint, a face or another screen locking before updating. For the moment, this parameter indicates “to come soon to Chrome”, but if you are already using Google Password Manager, it is essentially live at the moment. We do not know if there will also be a separate rocking in Chrome for Android.
Make sure it’s you to automatically do passwords
For more protection, always use your fingerprints, your face, another screen locking when you log into automatically (coming soon to Chrome
You can activate this by accessing the Chome> Google Password Manager settings and scrolling to the “Device settings” section.
Chrome and the Google Password Manager were quite lax in the way they protect the recorded passwords. Firefox, for example, forces you to unlock your device to access passwords if it is defined as an automatic service by default. But even if this is not the case, you should always use your unlocking method to access the recorded passwords in the Firefox settings. This new rocking sets up Google’s offers.
Source: Android Authority
Related
How to manage recorded passwords in chrome
Google Chrome comes with a practical password manager already integrated.

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