Alphabet Inc.'s Google announced on Thursday that its web browser Chrome "will now use real-time Safe Browsing protections to show warnings on potentially dangerous sites."
According to the statement, "Standard protection mode" will be available for Chrome on desktop and iOS, noting that it will roll out for Android as well later this month. It was pointed out that this mode "will check sites against Google’s server-side list of known bad sites in real-time."
The company also explained that if users seek even more protection, they have the possibility to "turn on Safe Browsing's Enhanced Protection mode" which "uses AI to block attacks, provides deep file scans, and offers extra protection from malicious Chrome extensions."