If the CA owner has not yet publicly disclosed an incident, they must notify chrome-root-program [at] google [dot] com and include an initial timeline for public disclosure. Chrome uses the information in the public disclosure as the basis for evaluating incidents.

If you have another instance of Chrome running and don't want to restart it, you can run the new instance under a separate user profile with the --user-data-dir option. Example: --user-data-dir=/tmp/chrome-debug. This is the same as using the userDataDir option in a launch-type config.


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If you see errors with a location like chrome-error://chromewebdata/ in the error stack, these errors are not from the extension or from your app - they are usually a sign that Chrome was not able to load your app.

You can launch Chrome using the --test-third-party-cookie-phaseout command-line flag or from Chrome 118, enable chrome://flags/#test-third-party-cookie-phaseout. This will set Chrome to block third-party cookies and ensure that new functionality and mitigations are active in order to best simulate the state after the phase out.

You can also try browsing with third-party cookies blocked via chrome://settings/cookies, but be aware that the flag ensures the new and updated functionality is also enabled. Blocking third-party cookies is a good approach to detect issues, but not necessarily validate you have fixed them.

There is an annoying bug in my chrome that causes a blinking cursor also known as "the text cursor," or "the insertion point" to appear wherever I click. For those guys who don't know what it is, it's the cursor that appears when you click on an element that you can edit on any website (like the comments section on youtube).

I've installed the chrome extension for dropbox passwords and the icon appears in the address bar. When I click on it a tab opens to my files. I cannot access the password screen. I've looked through settings and other menus to no avail. Any suggestions? Thanks.

Ten cases of major osteolysis were identified in patients with hemispherical cobalt chrome acetabular components of cementless resurfacing total hip prostheses at follow-up examinations ranging from two to five years. All components were porous coated with cobalt chrome spheres and were stabilized initially with screws. Five patients were women and five were men, with ages ranging from 20 to 59 years. The radiolucent cystic lesions with peripheral rims of reactive bone formation appeared one to five years after the operation. They measured from 1.5 to 6 cm in the largest diameter and were most often found adjacent to the screws used to secure the acetabular components to the skeleton. On the radiographs, none of the components appeared to be loose. Three patients had revision surgery. In two of the three cases, the implants were found to be firmly fixed. There was no clinical or bacteriologic evidence of infection. The polyethylene articulating surface showed signs of wear in all three cases and in one of the three it dislocated from the metal shell. Granulation tissue was found in the regions of osteolysis, and the diseased tissue contained numerous macrophages and giant cells. Lymphocytes and plasma cells were rare. Numerous small particles of phagocytosed polyethylene and metal in the cells were noted in two cases, whereas only polyethylene was found in the third.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS) e24fc04721

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