Nearly after a year of announcement, Google is finally rolling out the Assistant-powered feature in the Chrome browser that can automatically change a compromised password.
Upon entering a password that was previously noted in some breach, Google assistant in Chrome will notify a user and ask if he wants to change it. If he agrees to it, the feature will automatically convert the password into something strong and lets you save it to Chrome’s password manager for future use.
Changing a Compromised Password
At last year’s I/O event, Google announced a new feature for its Chrome browser that will help users change a compromised password automatically. Google started testing this with a handful of users in November last year, in Chrome for Android.
Now, the company is rolling out this feature widely, to everyone on Android. This is triggered when a user enters a compromised password into a website, with a pop-up saying that Google has found this in some past breach, and showing the user two actions – Close the pop-up or Change automatically .
Google Assistant being able to change breached passwords »»> pic.twitter.com/Dfcnvhs1S5 — Max Weinbach (@MaxWinebach) May 3, 2022