Another Chrome zero-day, this time on Android – check your version!


Two weeks ago, the big “zero-day” news concerned a bug in Chrome.

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We advised everyone to look for a Chrome or Chromium version number ending in .111, given that the previous mainstream version turned out to include a buffer overflow bug that was already known to cybercriminals.

Loosely speaking, if the crooks get there first and start exploiting a bug before a patch is available, that’s known as a zero-day hole.

The name comes from the early days of software piracy, when game hackers took brand new product releases and competed to see who could “crack” them first.

As you can imagine, in the days before widespread internet access made free games with a subscription-based online component viable, games vendors often resorted to abstruse and complex technical tricks to inhibit unlawful duplication of their software.

Nevertheless, top crackers would often unravel even the most ornery software protection code in a few days, and the lower the number of days before the crack came out, the bigger the bragging rights in underground forums.

The ultimate sort of crack – the gold-medal-with-a-laurel-wreath version – was one that came out with a zero-day delay (more coolly called an 0-day, with 0 pronounced as “oh”, not “zero”), where the game and its revenue-busting crack appeared on the very same day.

And “zero-day” is a term that has stuck, with the word now denoting a period of zero days during which even the most scrupulous sysadmin could have patched proactively – whether the crooks have known about the bug for years, months, weeks or days.

Well, the bad news is that there’s another vital update to Chrome, which means that users on Windows, Linux and Mac should now be looking for a version number of 86.0.4240.183, not for 86.0.4240.111.