Skip to main content

Google Chrome tops this list of most vulnerable browsers

According to a recent report, Google Chrome is the most vulnerability-ridden browser of all the major players. Chrome also happens to be the most popular browser in the world, accounting for over 60% of usage according to most sources, which means that a larger number of people are at risk until the bugs are fixed.

Every browser suffers from these security weaknesses from time to time, including the increasingly popular Apple Safari, Microsoft Edge, and Mozilla Firefox, but Chrome has had a startlingly high number of weaknesses in 2022. The vulnerability report from Atlas VPN summarized data found in the VulDB vulnerability database. In this year alone, 303 vulnerabilities have been detected in Google Chrome. Firefox came in a distant second with 117, while 103 were found in Edge, and only 26 in Safari.

Google Chrome logo appears over photo of laptop with chart of vulnerabilities.

Unfortunately, similar rankings appear when comparing these browsers for all time. Since Google Chrome was first launched, it has racked up 3,159 vulnerabilities according to the VulDB data, Firefox has 2,361, Safari takes third place with 1,239, and Edge has 806. It’s worth noting that Edge is a much newer browser than the rest, so an all-time comparison isn’t as necessarily fair.

In both the 2022 and all-time reports, a lesser-known browser, Opera, was surprisingly secure with no known vulnerabilities in 2022 and only 344 since it first launched in 1995. That averages out to less than 13 vulnerabilities each year over its 27 years of serving webpages to the 1% to 2% of people that use this underappreciated browser worldwide.

That doesn’t necessarily mean everyone should switch from Google Chrome to Opera. In fact, it’s certainly possible that Google is being more proactive about detecting and resolving issues than others, resulting in a higher ranking. Google’s argument is that more vulnerabilities fixed each is a sign of greater investment in the browser’s security, with the company seeking to identify and fix more issues every year — not less.

Either way, it’s a good reminder mindful about which websites you visit and to keep your browser updated to avoid loss of data and to help prevent viruses.

Editors' Recommendations

Alan Truly
Computing Writer
Alan is a Computing Writer living in Nova Scotia, Canada. A tech-enthusiast since his youth, Alan stays current on what is…
Playing games in your browser is about to get a lot better
A woman sits by a desk and plays a game on a laptop equipped with an AMD processor.

Google has just unveiled a huge improvement for browser games -- WebGPU. The new API might revolutionize the idea of playing games in the browser, and it won't be limited to just Google Chrome.

WebGPU will give web apps more access to the graphics card, enabling new levels of performance. The API is already out, and Google seems to have big plans for it going forward.

Read more
Google Chrome’s latest update solves the browser’s biggest problem
Google Chrome icon in mac dock.

Google Chrome is one of the best browsers around, but it's always had a big problem with memory usage. It's finally addressing the issue in a new Chrome 110 update that promises to reduce RAM usage by up to 30% and make the browser for efficient.

Chrome has a reputation for its speed, security, and feature drops, as well as a penchant for hanging on to your precious RAM like an episode of Hoarders. Granted, Google has made strides in improving Chrome's memory efficiency by hibernating tabs in the background, but it still struggles with it compared to Microsoft Edge or Mozilla Firefox.

Read more
Chrome’s take on Nvidia DLSS is set to launch, but you can’t use it yet
Three RTX 4080 cards sitting on a pink background.

Exciting new Nvidia tech is coming to Google Chrome, and on the browser side, the update is ready. We're talking about Nvidia's RTX Video Super Resolution (VSR), which is said to support upscaling up to 4K.

However, if you're itching to try it out, we have some bad news -- you can't use it just yet.

Read more