Chrome’s Zero-Day Drama: Google Rushes to Fix Fourth Flaw of 2025!
Google’s been busy patching another Chrome zero-day vulnerability. This marks the fourth “oops, not again” moment of the year. The zero-day bug was spotted by Google’s Threat Analysis Group, proving once again that sometimes it takes a village—or at least a team of highly-skilled techies—to keep our browsers from going rogue.

Hot Take:
Looks like Google Chrome is playing a zero-day whack-a-mole game, and those pesky vulnerabilities just don’t know when to quit! Who would’ve thought that being a browser could be so thrilling? It’s like Chrome’s auditioning for a spy thriller, complete with espionage, shadowy figures, and, of course, the obligatory explosive ending (a.k.a., the emergency patch).
Key Points:
- Google patches its fourth zero-day vulnerability in Chrome for 2025.
- The latest bug, CVE-2025-6554, is a high-severity type confusion flaw in Chrome V8 JavaScript engine.
- Security updates are rolling out worldwide to Windows, Mac, and Linux users.
- Zero-day discovered by Clément Lecigne of Google’s Threat Analysis Group.
- Updates mitigate risks from spyware targeting high-risk individuals.
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