http://www.fudzilla.com/news/graphics/39631-nvidia-breaches-the-walls-of-chrome
Thank goodness I don't use Chrome.


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Thank goodness I don't use Chrome.![]()
![]()
Thank goodness I don't use Chrome.![]()
Its not a bug really. In a programming language like C++ if you ask for a block of memory you get a block of memory with the contents of whatever was there before still entirely intact. that is just how operating systems work. When the program and then OS frees memory it doesn't overwrite it blank it out, that takes time and is pointless, you just get the random left overs of whatever used the memory before.
Anything that happens in software when it clearly isn't meant to is a bug.
So switch to AMD or give up porn is the solution?
Unlucky fella's![]()
Nvidia damage control....![]()
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Browse in private with incognito mode
If you don’t want Google Chrome to save a record of what you visit and download, you can browse the web in incognito mode.
*Disclaimer This post is not NVidia damage control but will be seen as such*
Sorry for being reasonably ignorant in the way that things are coded, but let me see if I have got this straight.
You intend to browse to a site using chrome, but you dot want anyone to know, so you use incognito mode.
Google chromes incognito mode help page states.
Well as far as you are concerned there is no record of you viewing, whatever you used incognito mode for, as Chrome says it doesn't keep track of it
Suddenly this info pops up in a game because the next programme to use the same memory space has access to the data, which isn't suppose to be recorded.
Just how it that NVidia's fault, chrome should have emptied that block of memory as it exited incognito mode.
If a bug in NVidia's driver can be blamed what about when the next piece of software, maybe some children's story book or something suddenly reads that area of memory, would that still be NVidia's fault, of course not. This is clearly Chromes fault for not clearing the data, which by its own statement isn't suppose to be kept track of anyway.
Yes there is obviously a bug in NVidia's driver that doesn't check the content of said memory block, but it cannot be held responsible for that info being there in the first place.