Follow ITProPortal:

RSS Tweet Digg

Google to pay users to report Chrome bugs

Google to pay users to report Chrome bugs

News Web

Google has announced that it will start paying amateur bug-hunters to have a sniff around its Chrome web browser to see if they can break it. The company said it will pony up a cash reward for bugs reported through the Chromium Bug Tracker. It will pay a geek-friendly $1,337 (£840) to researchers who find a "particularly severe or particularly clever" super bug. The company announced on its Chromium project blog, that in order to weed out vulnerabilities from...



Articles related to «Google to pay users to report Chrome bugs»

Mozilla Criticised For Helping European Commission Against Microsoft

Mozilla Criticised For Helping European Commission Against Microsoft

News Software

A number of high profile bloggers and tech writers have lambasted the Mozilla Foundation after its chairperson, Mitchell Baker, announced that the entity will officially lend a helping hand to the European Commission against...


Chrome "Complicates" Relationship Between Mozilla and Google

Chrome "Complicates" Relationship Between Mozilla and Google

News Web

In what will possibly be the most powerful understatement of the year, Mozilla's Chief Executive, John Lilly, has acknowledged that the organisation's relationship with the search engine giant has become "complicated" since...


Google Chrome Browser To Come Out Of Beta

Google Chrome Browser To Come Out Of Beta

News Web

Marissa Mayer, Google Vice President in Charge of Search Product and User Experience, has announced at the "Le Web 08" gathering in Paris that Google Chrome has come out of Beta. The open source application has been in beta...


Mozilla Firefox Reaches 20 Percent of Browser Market, Introduces Porn Mode

Mozilla Firefox Reaches 20 Percent of Browser Market, Introduces Porn Mode

News Software

Firefox, the open source browser, has just reached 20 percent for the first time ever, in its perpetual battle for market share with Microsoft's Internet Explorer. According to Net Applications, which like so many, monitors...


11 Reasons Why Firefox Should Really, Really Be Afraid of Google's Chrome

11 Reasons Why Firefox Should Really, Really Be Afraid of Google's Chrome

News Web

Mozilla, the organisation behind Firefox, has openly said that they are not afraid that Google's newly announced Chrome browser in a number of interviews given to various news outlets.The question is not whether they should be...

Follow ITProPortal:

RSS Tweet Digg

Owned &
operated by:

Net Communities