Korean News

Google chafes Korean clients again over late reaction to Chrome bug

By Park Jae-hyuk

Once more google confronted analysis from Korea’s web clients for not fixing a mistake in Chrome speedily, in spite of their constant grumblings throughout recent days.

After the U.S. tech goliath refreshed its internet browser to adaptation 100 last week to improve security, Korean clients griped about an issue while doing a quest for Korean words through Chrome’s location bar, in which it autocompleted their past hunt words without deleting them naturally, regardless of whether clients needed to look through changed words.

The mistake didn’t happen while composing Roman letters into Chrome’s location bar.

As per clients, Microsoft Edge and Naver Whale showed similar issues, as the internet browsers are additionally founded on Google’s Chromium open-source internet browser project.

A few Korean clients of Chrome said that they had attempted to fix the mistake by erasing their internet browser narratives and switching off the autocomplete work.

Be that as it may, their endeavors didn’t work, disturbing the burden.

Albeit a few clients detailed the bug to Google Chrome Help Center last week, the organization didn’t answer right away.

“I returned Chrome to the past rendition, due to the autocomplete work,” one web client composed on the web.

This isn’t whenever Koreans first have grumbled about Chrome while doing searches of Korean words.

In 2020, when clients composed in Korean words on Google’s internet searcher utilizing Chrome, the internet browser’s autocomplete work caused the duplication of the principal letter.

Subsequently, clients needed to delete the main letter physically, at whatever point they did a quest for a Korean word.

In those days, everything looked great when clients composed in Roman letters.

“Those blunders caused theory that Google is unconcerned with the Korean market,” another client said.

Information arranged by a web traffic investigation site, StatCounter, showed that Chrome represented 52.75 percent of Korea’s internet browser market in January, trailed by Apple Safari with 13.5 percent, Samsung Internet with 13.22 percent, Naver Whale with 9.43 percent, Microsoft Edge with 7.29 percent and Microsoft Internet Explorer with 1.23 percent.

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