Users of Google’s Chrome browser have faced three security concerns over the past 24 hours in the form of a malicious extension with more than 2 million users, a just-fixed zero-day, and new information about how malware can abuse Chrome’s sync feature to bypass firewalls. Let’s discuss them one by one.
First up, the Great Suspender, an extension with more than 2 million downloads from the Chrome Web Store, has been pulled from Google servers and deleted from users’ computers. The extension has been an almost essential tool for users with small amounts of RAM on their devices. Since Chrome tabs are known to consume large amounts of memory, the Great Suspender temporarily suspends tabs that haven’t been opened recently. That allows Chrome to run smoothly on systems with modest resources.
Characteristically terse
Google’s official reason for the removal is characteristically terse. Messages displayed on devices that had the extension installed say only, “This extension contains malware” along with an indication that it has been removed. A Google spokesman declined to elaborate.
The longer back story is that, as reported in a GitHub thread in November, the original extension developer sold it last June, and it began showing signs of malice under the new ownership. Specifically, the thread said, a new version contained malicious code that tracked users and manipulated Web requests.
The automatic removal has left some users in the lurch because they can no longer easily access suspended tabs. Users in this Reddit thread have devised several ways to recover their tabs.
High-severity zero-day
Next, Google on Thursday released a Chrome update that fixes what the company said was a zero-day vulnerability in the browser. Tracked as CVE-2021-21148, the vulnerability stems from a buffer overflow flaw in V8, Google’s open source JavaScript engine. Google rated the severity as “high.”

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