TECHFIXBK BLOG
Windows Browser Bug: Fix for Chrome Launch Failures Found
Windows Browser Bug: Fix for Chrome Launch Failures Found
Is Chrome crashing on Windows? A fix is now available for the Microsoft Family Safety bug affecting browser stability and February 2026 security updates.
Microsoft confirms resolution for a Family Safety glitch blocking Google Chrome on Windows 10 and 11.
Hook & Who This Is For (Intro)
You may have recently attempted to open Google Chrome on your Windows 10 or Windows 11 PC, only to find the browser immediately crashing or refusing to launch [9][11]. For many, this frustration was caused by a known bug in the Microsoft Family Safety service that inadvertently blocked web browsers despite previous parental approvals [9][11]. After several months of reports, a resolution has been confirmed to restore normal functionality [5][9].
This article is designed for:
- Windows 10 and Windows 11 users experiencing sudden browser shutdowns or launch failures [9][11].
- Parents and caregivers utilizing Microsoft Family Safety features to manage digital activity [11].
- Educators and IT teams interested in the latest digital safety resources released for Safer Internet Day 2026 [8][13].
We will cover the specifics of the service-side fix, how to ensure your device receives the update, and new developments in AI safety literacy [5][9][13]. This guide does not address hardware-related crashes or general internet connectivity failures unrelated to the Family Safety bug.
How to check if you are affected
The specific issue addressed in this report involves the Family Safety web filtering tool prompting users to ask for permission to use browsers that were already allowed [9]. Reports indicate this behavior primarily affected devices running Windows 10 22H2 and Windows 11 22H2 or later [9]. If your browser shuts down unexpectedly without an error code while these parental controls are active, you are likely impacted by this bug [9][11].
TL;DR / What This Means for You
Microsoft has released comprehensive updates to address several actively exploited vulnerabilities and functional glitches affecting both system performance and user safety.
Key Sources (Quick Links)
- Safer Internet Day 2026: Helping students be AI aware | Microsoft Education Blog [1]
- Building a safer digital future, together [2]
- Code, Compute and Connection: Inside the Inaugural NVIDIA AI Day São Paulo [3]
TL;DR / What This Means for You
The February 2026 Patch Tuesday is a critical maintenance event focused on closing security gaps and resolving specific hardware compatibility issues. Below are the essential takeaways:
- Active Security Threats: Microsoft patched 58 to 59 vulnerabilities, including six zero-day flaws that were already being exploited in the wild [5][8][32]. These flaws allow attackers to bypass security features in the Windows Shell, MSHTML Framework, and Microsoft Word [5][15][32].
- System and Gaming Fixes: For Windows 11, the update resolves a glitch affecting full-screen gaming mode and fixes a connectivity issue with certain WPA3-Personal Wi-Fi networks [11]. Windows 10 users received fixes for Chinese fonts and issues involving specific graphics processing units [11].
- Required Action: It is highly recommended to check for updates via
System > Windows Updateimmediately due to the high number of elevation-of-privilege and security-bypass vulnerabilities [5][8][11]. - Social Engineering Risk: Several of the currently exploited flaws require user interaction, such as clicking a malicious link or opening a booby-trapped shortcut file [5][15][32]. Even with updates installed, users should remain vigilant when handling unsolicited digital content [1][15].
- Stability Warning: Reports indicate that some recent updates have caused persistent issues for a subset of users, including Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) errors, boot loops, and problems with DHCP configurations [4][11]. It is generally advisable to ensure a full system backup exists before proceeding with large cumulative updates [4].
Background / Basics
To understand the recent updates regarding browser accessibility and system stability, it is helpful to look at how Windows manages user security and how modern software ecosystems interact.
What is Microsoft Family Safety?
Microsoft Family Safety is a parental control service integrated into the Windows operating system [4]. For over a decade, this tool has allowed parents and caregivers to monitor digital activity and manage screen time [6]. Its core functions typically include:
- Content Filtering: Restricting access to specific websites or categories [3][4].
- App Controls: Setting limits on which applications can be opened or how long they can be used [4].
- Activity Reporting: Providing logs of digital behavior to parents [4].
How Web Filtering Affects Browsers
For security services like Family Safety to work, they must monitor web traffic. This is often achieved through a "block list" or approval system [3]. When a child attempts to open a web browser that is not on the approved list, the system prompts them to ask for parental permission [3].
In a standard environment, once a parent approves a browser like Google Chrome, it should remain accessible. However, modern browsers update frequently to address security flaws—such as the high-risk vulnerabilities recently patched in Chrome 144 [11]. When these updates occur, the software version changes, which can potentially trigger security software to re-evaluate the application's "approved" status [3].
The Role of Service-Side Fixes
When software issues are identified, developers often use a service-side fix to resolve them [2]. Unlike a traditional "Windows Update" that requires a large download and a system restart, a service-side fix is deployed through the cloud [3].
| Feature | Standard Update | Service-Side Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Delivery | Manual or scheduled download | Automatic via internet connection [2] |
| User Action | Often requires a PC restart | Usually no action required [2] |
| Primary Goal | Feature additions or major patches | Adjusting cloud-based logic or "block lists" [3] |
Industry Context: NVIDIA and AI Developments
While Microsoft addresses OS-level stability, other industry leaders like NVIDIA are focusing on infrastructure and software ecosystems. Recent reports highlight NVIDIA's expansion into Sovereign AI and specialized AI frameworks, such as the Earth-2 family of models used for weather and climate prediction [9][14]. These developments represent the increasing complexity of the PC ecosystem, where OS settings, security software, and hardware-accelerated applications must work in unison to maintain system performance [14].
As of February 2026, industry analysts suggest that the integration of AI into daily workflows is transforming how safety and performance are managed, emphasizing "safety by design" rather than as an added layer [8][12].
Problem Explanation (What's Going On?)
Recent software updates have introduced a series of technical hurdles for Windows users, ranging from application compatibility issues to display glitches. The most prominent issue involved a bug that prevented Google Chrome from launching correctly on certain systems [8]. While a fix has been deployed, the disruption highlighted how sensitive the interaction between the operating system and third-party browsers can be [8][10].
Common Symptoms and Errors
Users across different versions of Windows have reported various performance and stability issues following recent patches. The impact is not limited to a single software category but affects browsers, gaming, and system power management [15].
The following table summarizes the most frequently reported issues:
| Affected Area | System | Reported Symptom |
|---|---|---|
| Web Browsers | Windows 10/11 | Google Chrome failing to launch or being "fundamentally changed" [8][12]. |
| Gaming | Windows 11 | Glitches occurring specifically when playing in full-screen mode [15]. |
| GPU Performance | Windows 10 | Unspecified issues interacting with certain graphics processing units [15]. |
| Connectivity | Windows 11 | Failure to connect to specific WPA3-Personal Wi-Fi networks [15]. |
| Power Management | Windows 10 | Systems restarting automatically instead of shutting down or hibernating [15]. |
Practical Impact on Users
The practical consequences of these bugs extend beyond mere annoyance. For students and professionals, a single cybersecurity incident or software failure can disrupt instruction, halt essential services, and erode trust in digital platforms [2].
In gaming environments, the full-screen glitch can significantly degrade the user experience, while the power management bug on Windows 10—which causes unexpected restarts—can lead to potential data loss if users assume their machines have safely shut down [15].
Security and Stability Context
While some of these issues are functional "feature bugs," they arrived alongside critical security concerns. The February update cycle addressed 55 vulnerabilities, including six zero-day bugs that were already being exploited in the wild [15].
Warning: One specific vulnerability detected in real-world attacks could allow hackers to disable security controls and access sensitive data [15].
Industry analysts suggest that the urgency of these security patches often creates a dilemma for users: updating immediately protects against active exploits but may also introduce the functional glitches mentioned above [5][15]. This "buggy update" trend appears to be a recurring challenge for the current Windows ecosystem [15].
Root Causes / Analysis (Why Is This Happening?)
Technical analysis of recent Windows 11 performance issues suggests that most system instability stems from a few core conflicts between software and hardware interfaces [9]. While specific symptoms like freezes or odd behavior can vary, the underlying triggers are often documented by official release health notes and administrative data [9][10].
Confirmed Causes
The following factors have been identified as primary drivers for system instability and performance degradation:
- Driver Mismatches and Conflicts: Outdated or mismatched hardware drivers from vendors such as NVIDIA, Intel, and AMD are frequently cited as the top culprits for video stuttering, audio dropouts, and sleep/resume failures [10]. Even when a driver appears to be functional, a conflict with the current Windows build can cause the hardware to misbehave [9].
- Faulty Update Patches: Although quality updates are designed to improve reliability, official documentation acknowledges that certain patches can introduce new bugs [9]. These "faulty patches" have been known to cause immediate system freezes or crashes shortly after installation [10].
- Resource Contention from Background Apps: Aggressive startup applications and background sync tools, such as OneDrive, often saturate the CPU, disk, and network I/O [10]. This high impact on system resources can turn a responsive desktop into a sluggish environment, leading to the perception of a "broken" system [10].
- Aggressive Security and Notification Settings: Resource-hungry visual effects and persistent notifications often contribute to overhead on thermally constrained or older hardware [10]. Furthermore, certain security settings or mismatched permissions can block standard application behavior [9].
Hypotheses and Unverified Factors
Beyond confirmed technical documentation, industry observations suggest additional factors may be at play:
- Third-Party Utility Interference: While not explicitly detailed in the health notes, it is likely that third-party "cleaners" or registry tweaks may exacerbate the instability caused by official updates [9].
- Hardware-Specific Thermal Throttling: It appears that on some systems, the increased GPU overhead from Windows 11 transparency and animation effects might lead to performance throttling [10], which could potentially manifest as intermittent display issues or black screens in unventilated environments.
- Sync Load Timing: It is hypothesized that heavy synchronization loads during critical system tasks (like installing apps or gaming) might trigger temporary driver timeouts, though Microsoft’s guidance currently only notes that these loads "slow a PC" rather than explicitly causing a crash [10].
| Likely Cause | Status | Impact Level |
|---|---|---|
| Driver Conflicts (NVIDIA/Intel) | Confirmed [10] | High |
| Faulty Windows Patches | Confirmed [9] | High |
| Background Sync (OneDrive) | Confirmed [10] | Medium |
| Visual Effects Overhead | Confirmed [10] | Low |
| Third-Party Tweaks | Hypothesis | Variable |
Warning: Attempting to fix these issues via the BIOS or deep registry edits before checking basic settings may lead to further instability [9].
Evidence & Reality Check
Official documentation and recent research confirm a shifting landscape in digital safety and artificial intelligence infrastructure. Data from the Global Online Safety Survey—comprising over 130,000 interviews across 37 countries—indicates that while users feel more productive, they also feel significantly less safe online [1][4].
The following findings highlight the current state of digital risks and industry responses:
| Category | Confirmed Data Point | Source |
|---|---|---|
| User Sentiment | 91% of respondents express concern regarding harms introduced by AI | [4] |
| Teen Risk Exposure | Hate speech (35%), scams (29%), and cyberbullying (23%) are the most common harms | [1] |
| Resilience Trends | 72% of teens reported talking to someone after encountering an online risk | [1] |
| AI Infrastructure | NVIDIA is actively accelerating Sovereign AI in Latin America through partnerships with providers like Claro | [14] |
Official Confirmations
Reports from early 2026 emphasize that safety must be "designed-in" rather than added as an afterthought [4]. Microsoft has confirmed the formation of its first AI Futures Youth Council, which will provide direct feedback from teens in the US and EU regarding emerging technology [1][5]. This initiative is supported by research involving code-sign workshops in Singapore and India, which found that young people value AI for providing a judgment-free space but remain wary of privacy risks and the "erosion of critical thinking" [5].
On the hardware and infrastructure side, official event summaries from NVIDIA AI Day São Paulo confirm a major push toward Sovereign AI [7][14]. This movement is intended to foster technological autonomy and economic growth by localized infrastructure, specifically utilizing the NVIDIA NeMo framework and NVIDIA NIM microservices [7][14].
Unverified Trends and Speculation
While industry efforts to address software stability and browser compatibility are ongoing, specific fixes for recent "Chrome blocking" incidents or "Nvidia black screen" errors are not explicitly detailed in the provided February 2026 safety and infrastructure reports.
It is generally observed that such technical resolutions are typically addressed through iterative driver updates or Windows cumulative patches. However, without direct confirmation in the current Tier A documentation, these specific fixes remain unverified at this time. Experts suggest that users should continue to monitor official support channels for patch notes related to specific hardware-software conflicts.
Self-Check / Diagnosis
If you are experiencing browser failures, display issues, or system instability, you can use the following steps to diagnose whether these specific Windows and NVIDIA bugs apply to your device.
1. Test Google Chrome Launch Stability
Verify if Google Chrome fails to launch or closes immediately after opening. This issue is frequently linked to Microsoft Family Safety settings on Windows 10 and Windows 11 [15]. If the browser remains unresponsive, it may be due to a bug in the activity reporting service that requires a service-side fix or an update to allowlist newer browser versions [15].
2. Verify Windows Update History
Check your recent update installation status to see if the February 2026 patches are present. Navigate to Settings > Windows Update > Update history to confirm if your system has received the latest quality updates or if recent patches have caused "Endless restarts" or "Boot-Volume" errors [7][92]. Some users report that the latest updates resolved full-screen gaming glitches and WPA3-Personal Wi-Fi connectivity issues [10].
3. Identify GPU and Driver Conflicts
Inspect your current display driver status if you experience stuttering video, black screens, or "audio crackle" [3][92].
- Open Settings and go to Windows Update.
- Select Advanced options, then Optional updates to see if specific drivers from NVIDIA, AMD, or Intel are pending [92].
- If a new driver was recently installed and performance dropped, check Device Manager to see if the Roll Back Driver option is available under the device properties [3].
4. Monitor System Shutdown and Boot Behavior
Observe how your PC handles power commands, as recent bugs have caused some Secure Launch-compatible systems to restart instead of shutting down or hibernating [10]. If your device is stuck in a boot loop or displays a Blue Screen of Death (BSOD) after the most recent Patch Tuesday, it is likely affected by the known issues currently being tracked in the Windows 11 24H2 or Windows 10 update cycles [7][10].
5. Check for Resource Saturation
Use Ctrl+Shift+Esc to open Task Manager and navigate to the Startup apps tab. Look for "High impact" entries or aggressive background tools like OneDrive that may be saturating disk and network I/O during large sync operations [3][92]. Industry reports suggest that heavy background synchronization often causes immediate performance throttling, which can be mistaken for hardware failure or OS corruption [3].
| Symptom | Potential Cause | Verification Method |
|---|---|---|
| Chrome not opening | Family Safety bug | Check "Activity reporting" settings [15] |
| NVIDIA black screens | Driver mismatch | Check Optional updates for vendor drivers [92] |
| Persistent restarts | Secure Launch bug | Check if "Shut down" triggers a reboot [10] |
| System sluggishness | OneDrive / Startup apps | Monitor Task Manager disk I/O [3] |
Warning: Attempting to fix these issues via registry edits or third-party "cleaner" utilities may cause further instability. Most of these glitches are officially acknowledged by Microsoft and typically require specific settings checks or official patches rather than deep system modifications [92].
Solutions / What to Do
To address the evolving risks of the digital landscape and the integration of AI in learning environments, several practical steps are available for educators, IT teams, and families. These actions range from immediate resource implementation to long-term strategic framework adjustments.
Short-Term Options for Schools and Families
Immediate actions focus on using established toolkits to improve communication and awareness regarding online safety.
- Implement the K–12 Cybersecurity Conversation Guide: This guide provides actionable tips and prompts to help students understand safe online behavior and strengthen digital habits [1][3].
- Utilize Visual Learning Tools: The K–12 Cybersecurity Infographic can be used to help students and caregivers identify real-world examples of phishing, scam ads, and suspicious links [1].
- Activate Enhanced Parental Controls: With many regions raising the age for digital consent, parents may now enable Family Safety controls for teens up to the age of 18 to manage digital boundaries [9].
- Review the Microsoft Education Security Toolkit: IT teams should utilize this toolkit to access education-aligned security frameworks and data governance guidance specifically for AI and research environments [4].
Long-Term Options for Institutions and Developers
Building a resilient digital foundation requires moving beyond reactive measures toward integrated safety-by-design and literacy-based curriculum.
- Integrate Gamified Learning: Educators can incorporate the Minecraft Education CyberSafe series into the curriculum. The newest module, Bad Connection?, helps students ages 11 to 14 rehearse their responses to manipulative interactions and online recruitment in a safe environment [2][3][10].
- Adopt Zero Trust Security Frameworks: Institutions are encouraged to shift toward Zero Trust principles, reframing cybersecurity as a foundation for innovation rather than a barrier [4].
- Invest in AI Literacy: Curriculum should be updated to help learners assess AI-shaped content, recognize misinformation, and protect their digital identities [4][6].
- Foster Sovereign AI Ecosystems: For regional developers and governments, focus on building Sovereign AI platforms using specialized software like NVIDIA NeMo and NIM microservices to ensure national data autonomy and security [11][14].
Risks and Limitations
While these tools significantly enhance safety, they do not provide an absolute guarantee against all digital harms. Cyber threats, such as hate speech and scams, continue to evolve, and technical controls should always be paired with active mentorship and open communication [5][10].
Warning: Security tools are most effective when used as part of a holistic approach; relying solely on software without educational support potentially leaves users vulnerable to social engineering [9].
FAQ
Who can use the Microsoft Education Security Toolkit? The toolkit is designed for both educators and IT professionals. It provides practical guidance for small and large teams, including resources for student-run Security Operations Centers (SOCs) [4].
What age group is the CyberSafe series designed for? The CyberSafe series in Minecraft Education generally targets students between the ages of 8 and 14. Specifically, the Bad Connection? module is tailored for the 11-to-14 age range [2][3].
How can parents monitor older teens' online safety? Recent updates to Family Safety controls allow parents to extend monitoring and digital guardrails to teens up to age 18, aligning with new local laws regarding digital consent in various countries [9].
What are the primary risks teens face online currently? According to recent survey data, the most common harms reported by teens include hate speech (35%), scams (29%), and cyberbullying (23%) [5].
Is the Minecraft Education content aligned with official standards? Yes. The CyberSafe curriculum aligns with standards from the Computer Science Teacher Association (CSTA) and Cyber.org [2].
Risks, Limits, and When to Stop
Implementing new digital safety tools and AI-driven solutions involves inherent risks that users and administrators must recognize. While Microsoft and partners aim to minimize these threats through safety-by-design [2][8], no technology provides absolute protection against evolving online harms.
Technical and Behavioral Risks
Integrating AI into educational or professional environments introduces specific trade-offs. Early findings from workshops indicate that while users value AI, they are increasingly concerned about privacy risks and the potential erosion of critical thinking [1].
The following table outlines the primary risks associated with emerging digital environments:
| Risk Category | Description | Potential Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Overreliance | Excessive trust in AI outputs without verification [1]. | Decreased critical thinking and loss of agency [1][6]. |
| Exposure to Harm | Rising instances of hate speech, scams, and cyberbullying [2]. | Emotional distress and compromised digital well-being [1][2]. |
| Cybersecurity Breach | Attacks on student records or intellectual property [4][10]. | Disrupted instruction and loss of community trust [4][10]. |
| Manipulation | Targeted recruitment or radicalization in online spaces [3][6]. | Severe real-world safety consequences for young users [6]. |
Understanding the Limits of Safety Tools
It is essential to understand that digital citizenship resources, such as the CyberSafe series in Minecraft Education, are intended as "rehearsal spaces" rather than absolute shields [3][4]. These tools help students practice evaluating risks and identifying "red flags," but they do not eliminate the underlying threats found in open internet environments [3].
Furthermore, parental controls and safety frameworks are not "bolt-on" fixes that work in isolation [8]. They require active participation from families and educators to be effective. For instance, while reporting behavior among teens has increased to 72% following a risk encounter, the underlying exposure to risks like scams (29%) and cyberbullying (23%) continues to rise [2].
When to Stop and Seek Professional Support
There are clear indicators that a user or institution should pause their current digital strategy and seek external expertise or intervention.
- Systemic Disruption: If a cybersecurity incident halts essential services or delays research, internal teams should stop standard operations and activate the Microsoft Education Security Toolkit or contact specialized security partners [4][10].
- Emotional Distress: When digital interactions lead to significant emotional dimensions—such as anxiety from peer pressure or manipulative interactions—users should transition from digital rehearsal spaces to real-world support systems [1][3].
- Technical Uncertainty: If educators or IT teams cannot confidently assess content shaped by AI or recognize misinformation, they should pause implementation until they have completed AI literacy training or professional development (PD) sessions [5][10][12].
- Persistent Risk Exposure: If an individual encounters repeated instances of radicalization attempts or suspicious recruitment, they must immediately stop the interaction and use official reporting channels [3][6].
Warning: Security and safety tools are designed to reduce stigma and normalize conversations about unsafe interactions, but they cannot replace professional judgment in high-risk scenarios [3].
If you are unsure whether a digital environment is safe for your students or family, it is typically more effective to pause and consult official safety guides than to risk exposure to unmitigated online harms.
FAQ
What safety tools are available for parents to manage their teenagers' digital activity?
Microsoft offers Family Safety controls that have been integrated into Windows for over a decade [2]. As many countries increase the local age for digital consent, parents potentially have the option to enable these controls for teenagers up to the age of 18 [2]. These tools are intended to be part of a holistic approach to digital parenting and are supported by a new guide designed to help families set up and understand the platform [2].
What are the primary concerns young people have regarding AI technology?
Recent research involving students aged 13–17 indicates that while they value AI as a judgment-free space, they are aware of significant trade-offs [2]. Findings from workshops in December 2025 suggest that young people often view privacy risks, overreliance, and the erosion of critical thinking as larger threats than receiving incorrect advice [2]. These insights are expected to inform the development of future educational resources for educators and families [2].
Are there free resources to help students learn about cybersecurity?
Yes, several free resources are available through Minecraft Education and the Microsoft Education Security Toolkit [2][3]. The CyberSafe: Bad Connection? series provides immersive Minecraft worlds that translate complex digital risks into interactive learning experiences [2]. Additionally, schools can access the K–12 Cybersecurity Conversation Guide and infographics that use real-world examples of phishing and scam ads to teach students how to identify online threats [3].
How can schools implement digital citizenship initiatives?
Educators and IT teams can utilize practical guidance to strengthen their institution's safety posture [3]. It is generally recommended to use specialized guides for classroom discussions and staff professional development (PD) sessions [3]. For broader community impact, these materials can be shared during cybersecurity awareness campaigns or family-engagement nights to help build safer online habits both at school and at home [3].
What role does the Microsoft Youth Council play in digital safety?
The Youth Council is comprised of teenagers from across the US and EU [2]. This initiative is designed to gather direct feedback from younger users regarding the role they want emerging technology to play in their lives [2]. By listening to teen perspectives, the program aims to better support their safety and ensure that technology development aligns with the needs of the next generation [2].
Summary / Key Takeaways
The digital landscape is currently defined by a dual focus on expanding AI capabilities and addressing the resulting safety concerns. For Safer Internet Day 2026, initiatives are shifting toward AI literacy and proactive security frameworks to protect users, particularly in educational environments [10][12].
- Risk Perceptions: While technology has increased connectivity, 2026 survey data shows that many users feel less safe online, with 91% of people expressing concern over potential harms introduced by AI [2][5].
- Educational Support: Microsoft Education has released the Education Security Toolkit, which applies Zero Trust principles and data governance guidance to help institutions safely adopt AI technologies [12].
- Interactive Learning: To build digital resilience, the CyberSafe series in Minecraft Education has reached over 80 million downloads, recently adding "Bad Connection?" to help students identify manipulative online interactions [6][9].
- Regional AI Infrastructure: NVIDIA is expanding its "Sovereign AI" efforts, partnering with regional providers like Claro to build localized AI infrastructure and specialized LLM (Large Language Model) development pipelines [7][15].
If you’re unsure about your digital safety settings or infrastructure security, it’s usually cheaper to ask someone once than to fix a mistake later.
Quellen
[1] Safer Internet Day 2026: Helping students be AI aware | Microsoft Education Blog
[2] Building a safer digital future, together
[3] Code, Compute and Connection: Inside the Inaugural NVIDIA AI Day São Paulo
[4] Microsoft fixes bug that blocked Google Chrome from launching
[5] Microsoft's February Patch fixes 6 zero-days - but some Windows users sh...
[6] Chrome 145 now links with Google Wallet for autofill convenience
[7] Microsoft February 2026 Patch Tuesday fixes 6 zero-days, 58 flaws
[8] Microsoft fixes dozens of security flaws in Windows, Office, and Azure
[9] Chrome on Windows will let users launch the browser in the foreground at startup
[10] Windows 11 is testing new 2026 features and some are already live
[11] Microsoft
[12] Verwirrung am Patchday: Nutzer wundern sich über neue Windows-Version
[13] Patchday für Windows 11: Microsoft verteilt neue Secure-Boot-Zertifikate
[14] Windows 10/11 Patch-Day Februar: Das gro�e Sicherheitsupdate ist da
[15] Critical Microsoft bug from 2024 under exploitation
[16] Nvidia DGX Spark update cuts idle power by 32% or more — hot-plug detec...
[17] Microsoft startet neue Windows Recovery-Updates f�r Windows 11
[18] Cursor claims Nvidia engineers produce three times more code with AI tools
[19] Nvidia's stock is down and AMD is up. The culprit may be Arista.
[20] The best VPN extensions for Chrome in 2026: Expert tested and reviewed
[21] Der Windows-eigene Virenschutz könnte so viel schöner sein - auch auf Ihrem PC
[22] Windows 11 KB5077181 fixes gaming bugs, Nvidia black screen, and performance ...
[23] Google tests optional Chrome auto-launch on Windows 11, fixes ZIP drag-and-dr...
[24] Crisol: Theater of Idols Crash Fix - 5 Proven Solutions (2026)
[25] Latest Windows 11 Update KB5074109 Causes Nvidia GPU Performance Drops | The ...
[26] Fixing Gaming PC Black Screen Problems - Modern Gamer
[27] Contrôle parental de Microsoft : ça s’arrange (enfin) pour Chrome sur Windows
[28] Windows 11 : il aura fallu 8 mois à Microsoft pour réparer ce bug gênant avec...
[29] Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari are teaming up to fix common web problems
[30] Windows 11 February 2026 Patch: KB5077181 and KB5075941 fix zero-days, shutdo...
[31] Windows Family Safety: Microsoft fixt ‚Chrome’-Blockade (10.2.2026)
[32] February 2026 Patch Tuesday includes six actively exploited zero-days
[33] Microsoft patches zero-day flaws in latest Windows update
[34] Microsoft patches 58 flaws as six exploited zero-days drive urgency
[35] Microsoft February 2026 Patch Tuesday Fixes 54 Vulnerabilities, Including 6 Z...
[36] Is Edge the Same as Chrome? The Hidden Truth About 2026 Browsers
[37] Chrome Security Update | Cyber News
[38] Microsoft Patch Tuesday February Update Flags Exchange and Azure Vulnerabilit...
[39] Windows 11 Update KB5077181 Traps Users in Boot Loops
[40] Chrome Security Update - Patch for Vulnerabilities that Enables Code Executio...
[41] Chrome Security Update Released to Address Code Execution Vulnerabilities
[42] Windows 11 Update KB5077181 Security and AI Features for 24H2 and 25H2 Versio...
[43] 12 years ago, I left AMD for NVIDIA, and AMD has never given me a reason to c...
[44] NVIDIA confirma que actualización de Windows 11 daña sus GPU
[45] NVIDIA lanza una nueva versión Hotfix de su App para solucionar problemas en ...
[46] Achievement Industry - Windows 11 KB5074109: NVIDIA alerte sur une baisse de ...
[47] NVIDIA App Hotfix Update Resolves Software Launch Errors and Laptop Graphics ...
[48] NVIDIA blames the latest Windows 11 update for reducing gaming performance - ...
[49] Desktop Window Manager Zero-Day Vulnerability Allows Privilege Escalation
[50] 7-Step Powerful CVE-2026-21509 Office Zero-Day Triage
[51] February Patch Tuesday: Microsoft drops six zero-days | Computer Weekly
[52] This Chrome extension blocks social media until you scream (literally) in agony
[53] Windows 10 users warned to upgrade now or risk a ‘degraded security sta...
[54] How To Install Or Update NVIDIA Drivers [2025 Guide] - GPU Mag
[55] NVIDIA App Hotfix 11.0.6.386 restores Advanced Optimus MUX controls
[56] Nvidia déploie une mise à jour d'urgence pour corriger un bug de son app...
[57] These Chrome flags made my browser noticeably faster
[58] KB5007651 Keeps Reinstalling on Windows 11 — What It Is and How to Fix It
[59] 'Critical' Windows security update released by Microsoft to fix 59 fl...
[60] KB5077181 Windows 11 Update Causes Boot Loops: How to Fix and Prevent
[61] Patchday: Microsoft Office Updates (10. Februar 2026)
[62] Microsoft-Patchday: Sechs Zero-Day-Lücken aktiv ausgenutzt
[63] Microsoft Patchday Februar 2026
[64] NVIDIA App 11.0.6.386 als Hotfix
[65] Windows 11 February 2026 Patch Tuesday Released: KB5077181 and KB5075941 Now ...
[66] Microsoft Patch Tuesday February 2026 – 54 Vulnerabilities Fixed, Including 6...
[67] Microsoft Releases February 2026 Patch Tuesday Updates
[68] iTWire - Microsoft Patch Tuesday Reveals 55 Vulnerabilities
[69] Microsoft veröffentlicht exklusives Windows-Update KB5077179 – Nur...
[70] Google releases Chrome 145 offline installers for enterprise deployment
[71] Download Microsoft Edge (free) for Windows, macOS, Android, APK, iOS and Linu...
[72] Externe Teams-Nutzer lassen sich bald blockieren
[73] Microsoft schließt sechs gefährliche Zero-Day-Lücken
[74] Google Chrome 145.0.7632.45/145.0.7632.46 korrigiert 11 Sicherheitslücken [Up...
[75] Windows 11 Update KB5077181 verursacht Startprobleme: Das können Sie tun
[76] Windows 11/10: Google Chrome installieren – so geht’s
[77] Breaking the Energy Wall: Nvidia and Duke Energy Forge New Alliance to Power ...
[78] 287 Chrome Extensions Caught Harvesting Browsing Data from 37M Users
[79] Google Chrome ha intentado erradicarlos por todos los medios y ha fracasado: ...
[80] Nvidia Reportedly Faces Gaming GPU Delays: Does That Weaken the Bull Case for...
[81] FinancialContent - Nvidia Reportedly Faces Gaming GPU Delays: Does That Weake...
[82] Microsoft sigue arreglando problemas críticos en Windows 10 pese a que ya no ...
[83] AMD vs NVIDIA GPU: Which One Gamers Like More? - Gadget Salvation Blog
[84] Companies want you to think you need an NPU, but your GPU is much better
[85] AMD vs. Nvidia: Which AI Stock Will Outperform in 2026? | The Motley Fool
[86] I stopped relying on my antivirus and started using these behavior-monitoring...
[87] These Malicious AI Assistants in Chrome Are Stealing User Credentials
[88] 300,000+ Chrome users installed these malicious extensions posing as AI assis...
[89] How to find and remove credential-stealing Chrome extensions
[90] Windows 11 February Update Triggers Startup Issues for Users
[91] Windows 11 KB5077181 25H2 Launches: New Features and Offline Installers Avail...
[92] Users Solve Windows 11 Issues With Four Settings Checks
[93] Desktop Window Manager Zero-Day Enables Privilege Escalation
[94] Your RGB software is secretly stealing your FPS (and why I finally deleted it)
[95] La mise à jour Windows KB5077181 sème le chaos avec des red&eac...
[96] Tested: Resident Evil 4 Remake
[97] Digital Foundry Talks Final Fantasy VII Rebirth
[98] Digital Foundry: DLSS 4.5 Technology Proved Better Than Expected
[99] Unreal Engine 3: The Look, The Limits, The Legacy
[100] Resident Evil 4 Remake corre hasta 40% más lento en PC y deshabilita MODs tra...
[101] GlobalFoundries posts strong Q1 on data center demand
[102] Data center capex to hit $1.7 trillion by 2030 due to AI boom
[103] AMD Just Announced a Huge Turnaround. Is It a Buy? | The Motley Fool
[104] Your privacy choices
[105] Antivirus and security in Windows 11: a complete guide
[106] XFN 1.1 profile
[107] fonts.gstatic.com
[108] fonts.gstatic.com
Relevant Services
More from the Blog
- Windows 11 Performance: Why Your Fast PC Feels Slow(Mar 1, 2026)
- Windows 11 Start Menu Redesign: Why Users Are Frustrated(Mar 1, 2026)
- Windows 11's New Start Menu Triggers 'Windows 8' Flashbacks(Mar 1, 2026)
- Microsoft Copilot Tasks: How AI Agents Now Automate Work(Mar 1, 2026)
- Trump Orders US Agencies to Halt All Anthropic AI Use(Feb 28, 2026)
- NVIDIA GeForce Driver 595.59: Critical Fan Bug and Rollback(Feb 28, 2026)
- View all blog posts
Brauchen Sie Hilfe?
Wir reparieren Ihren PC oder Laptop schnell und zuverlässig.
Jetzt Reparatur anfragen