Google released a security update for Chrome to address a high-severity zero‑day vulnerability (CVE-2026-2441) on Friday.
“Google is aware that an exploit for CVE-2026-2441 exists in the wild,” the company said.
About CVE-2026-2441
CVE-2026-2441 is a use-after-free bug in the CSS processing component of Google Chrome, which allows a remote attacker “to execute arbitrary code inside a sandbox via a crafted HTML page.”
The vulnerability was reported by researcher Shaheen Fazim on February 11, 2026.
Whether a coincidence or not, came a day after Google shipped a fix for another use-after-free flaw in the same component that was also flagged by researchers.
As per usual, Google did not share more details about the fixed zero-day, nor details about its possible in-the-wild exploitation.
The fix has been shipped in Chrome 145.0.7632.75/76 for Windows/Mac and 144.0.7559.75 for Linux.
If automatic updates are enabled in Chrome, the security patch has likely already been downloaded – you only need to restart the browser for it to take effect. If you update manually, you should check for the latest version and install it as soon as possible.
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