Chrome it becomes a smarter browser, since it will now automatically correct the web address that you have misspelled. So, Google does not want you to enter fraudulent pages.
How will this feature work? Well, as Google describes from its blog: “When you type a website in Chrome’s address bar, typos in the URL will now be detected and will suggest websites based on fixes.”
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According to The Verge, this function will be available first in the desktop version of Chrome and then implemented in the following months on mobile phones.
“Seems like a useful tool to make sure you’re accessing the right websites (and not the questionable ones you often get when you misspell the name of a popular website)”, reports the media outlet.
Also, Google announced other updates such as greater availability of Live Caption to more Android devices. As well as making the wheelchair icon more visible on Google Maps. Finally, it’s also running a closed beta for two new features in Lookout, an app aimed at blind users.
Source: Elcomercio
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