CVE-2026-11645 – Google fixes a zero-day flaw in Chrome’s V8 JavaScript engine

10 Jun 2026

Google has released an emergency security update for Chrome after identifying an actively exploited zero-day vulnerability tracked as CVE-2026-11645. The flaw resides within Chrome’s V8 JavaScript engine and has been classified as a high-severity out-of-bounds read/write vulnerability.

 

Through this blog, we will understand what the vulnerability is about, the threat posed by the vulnerability, and some of the security actions that organizations can take to prevent/mitigate the threats posed by the vulnerability.

About the vulnerability

Vendor + component affected 

CVE Identifier 

About  

Severity 

Google + 

 

Google Chrome Browser (V8 JavaScript Engine)  

 

CVE-2026-11645 

 

The flaw resides within Chrome’s V8 JavaScript engine. 

 

It can be triggered when a user visits a specially crafted malicious webpage containing weaponized JavaScript code.  

 

Not assigned 

What can attackers do with the vulnerability?

A successful exploitation of the flaw may allow attackers to execute arbitrary code within the Chrome browser’s sandboxed environment.

 

Attackers can host or inject malicious JavaScript into a crafted webpage. When a victim visits the page using a vulnerable Chrome version, the exploit may trigger memory corruption within the V8 engine, potentially enabling arbitrary code execution inside the browser process.

 

Attackers can exploit the vulnerability to

  • Engage in browser-based remote code execution
  • Steal authentication tokens, browser cookies, and session data
  • Deliver malware through drive-by-download attacks
  • Gain initial access (especially advanced threat actors targeting enterprise environments)
  • Chain with other sandbox escape or privilege escalation flaws to compromise endpoints
  • Engage in phishing, credential theft, and carry out post-exploitation activities

SharkStriker recommendations

To reduce the risk of browser-based compromise and protect enterprise assets from active exploitation campaigns, SharkStriker recommends implementing the following defensive measures:

 

  • Deploy Chrome Security Updates Immediately: Ensure all managed endpoints are upgraded to the latest Chrome Version 149 release or later. Prioritize internet-facing and high-risk user systems.
  • Patch Chromium-Based Browsers: Verify that Microsoft Edge, Brave, Opera, Vivaldi, and other Chromium-derived browsers receive corresponding vendor security updates.
  • Strengthen Endpoint Detection and Response (EDR): Ensure security monitoring solutions actively detect browser exploitation behaviors, suspicious child process creation, memory injection attempts, and abnormal browser activity.
  • Conduct Proactive Threat Hunting: Review historical endpoint telemetry for unusual Chrome process behavior, suspicious downloads, browser-spawned PowerShell or command-line activity, and indicators of browser-based exploitation.
  • Implement Web Security Controls: Utilize URL filtering, secure web gateways, and DNS security solutions to reduce user exposure to malicious or compromised websites.
  • Promote Browser Security Awareness: Reinforce employee awareness regarding suspicious websites, malicious advertisements, and unsolicited links that may be used to deliver browser-based exploits.
  • Maintain Continuous Patch Management: Given that this is the fifth actively exploited Chrome zero-day disclosed in 2026, organizations should prioritize rapid browser patching as part of their critical vulnerability management program.

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