Of the 13 vulnerabilities patched by MS16-009, nine affected every version of IE that is still supported, including IE9 on Windows Vista and IE10 on Windows Server 2012. Because different versions of Microsoft's browser share large amounts of code -- that was one of the primary reasons the Redmond, Wash. company has dead-ended IE and started over with Edge -- it's almost certain that the nine vulnerabilities also exist in IE7 and IE8, and in IE9 and IE10 on Windows editions ineligible for patching.
In other words, more than two-thirds of the vulnerabilities patched by Microsoft on Tuesday probably exist in the retired IE versions.
You can now backup or export saved credentials in Google Chrome by enabling a flags setting. Here is how to do that.
Open Google Chrome and type the following URL in the address bar.
chrome://flags/
Press Ctrl + F, and search for “Password import and export”
Or use the following URL to go to the password-import-export flags setting directly
chrome://flags/#password-import-export
Set the “Import and Export functionality in password settings” drop down box to “Enabled”
Restart Google Chrome, open Settings, click “Show advanced settings”
Under “Passwords and Forms”, click “Manage Passwords”.
The Export and Import buttons are at the bottom of the list. Exports to Documents CSV file you name.
You can read or edit a CSV file (comma separated values) with Notepad or Excel.