Other high-severity flaws addressed with the update include: heap buffer overflow in ANGLE, out of bounds memory access in V8, out of bounds read in Fonts, integer overflows in ANGLE and GPU, insufficient validation of untrusted input in Media, inappropriate implementation in ServiceWorker, insufficient policy enforcement in DevTools, type confusions in Accessibility and Runtime, insufficient data validation issues in DevTools and InterestGroups, out of bounds write in Skia, and uninitialized use in Dawn.More than 60 of the security defects patched with the latest Chrome release are medium-severity flaws, while the remaining bugs are low-severity weaknesses.While most of the addressed vulnerabilities were discovered by Google, the company says it paid $138,000 in bug bounty rewards to external researchers. The final amount could be much higher, as the internet giant has yet to disclose the amounts handed out for many of the resolved issues.The latest Chrome iteration is now rolling out as version 148.0.7778.96 for Linux and as versions 148.0.7778.96/97 for Windows and macOS.Related:Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in AndroidRelated:Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI SurgeRelated:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

More than 60 of the security defects patched with the latest Chrome release are medium-severity flaws, while the remaining bugs are low-severity weaknesses.While most of the addressed vulnerabilities were discovered by Google, the company says it paid $138,000 in bug bounty rewards to external researchers. The final amount could be much higher, as the internet giant has yet to disclose the amounts handed out for many of the resolved issues.The latest Chrome iteration is now rolling out as version 148.0.7778.96 for Linux and as versions 148.0.7778.96/97 for Windows and macOS.Related:Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in AndroidRelated:Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI SurgeRelated:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

While most of the addressed vulnerabilities were discovered by Google, the company says it paid $138,000 in bug bounty rewards to external researchers. The final amount could be much higher, as the internet giant has yet to disclose the amounts handed out for many of the resolved issues.The latest Chrome iteration is now rolling out as version 148.0.7778.96 for Linux and as versions 148.0.7778.96/97 for Windows and macOS.Related:Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in AndroidRelated:Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI SurgeRelated:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

The latest Chrome iteration is now rolling out as version 148.0.7778.96 for Linux and as versions 148.0.7778.96/97 for Windows and macOS.Related:Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in AndroidRelated:Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI SurgeRelated:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

Related:Critical Remote Code Execution Vulnerability Patched in AndroidRelated:Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI SurgeRelated:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

Related:Google Adjusts Bug Bounties: Chrome Payouts Drop as Android Rewards Rise Amid AI SurgeRelated:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

Related:Chrome 147, Firefox 150 Security Updates Rolling OutRelated:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

Related:Claude Mythos Finds 271 Firefox Vulnerabilities

Ionut Arghire is an international correspondent for SecurityWeek.

In cyber-physical systems (CPS), just one hour of downtime can outweigh an entire annual security budget. Learn how to master the Return on Security Investment (ROSI) to align security goals with the bottom-line priorities.

Source: SecurityWeek