Google developers have wanted to remove FTP support from Chrome for years and an upcoming change in how files stored on FTP servers are rendered in the browser may be the first step in its ultimate ...
"The current FTP implementation in Google Chrome has no support for encrypted connections (FTPS), nor proxies. Usage of FTP in the browser is sufficiently low that it is no longer viable to invest in ...
Last month, Chrome 94 rolled out to the Stable channel with support for a controversial idle detection API and a VirtualKeyboard API, among many other things. Since Chrome has shifted to a four-week ...
Google Chrome developers have published a document explaining that from version 82, the browser will no longer support FTP connections because usage “of FTP in the browser is sufficiently low that it ...
Due to the shortage of IPv4 addresses, and for security reasons, many corporate and home networks use firewalls and network address translations, leading to network scenarios not envisioned by the ...
Google has released today version 87 of its Chrome browser, a release that comes with a security fix for the NAT Slipstream attack technique and a broader deprecation of the FTP protocol. Todays' ...