Google adds encrypted, opt-in autofill for passports, driver’s licenses, and vehicle info, with on-screen confirmation before anything is filled.
What’s happened? Google is expanding Chrome’s enhanced autofill on desktop to cover more sensitive details. Chrome now saves and fills passports, driver’s license numbers, and vehicle information, and it handles complex web forms more reliably. The update starts rolling out today worldwide, in every language. It will also recognize common document fields across travel booking portals, insurance claims, and dealership sites, reducing the usual copy paste shuffle that slows you down during multi page forms.
- According to Google, autofill covers passports, driver’s license numbers, and vehicle details like plates or VINs.
- Saving is opt in, then encrypted after you grant permission.
- Before anything appears, Chrome asks you to confirm the fill.
This is important because: Chrome is touching high-stakes fields, so privacy and control matter. The browser keeps sensitive items local, requires consent to store them, and adds a check before each fill. It also aims to cut errors on the web’s messiest forms.
- Sensitive items are opt in and encrypted, and Chrome asks before it fills.
- Improved format handling aims to boost accuracy on sites with unusual layouts.
Why should I care? If you book flights, renew registrations, or use government portals, this reduces retyping and mistakes. Your IDs and vehicle data stay local to the browser until you approve, which keeps surprises to a minimum.
- Faster sign-ups and checkouts when sites request IDs or vehicle details.
- A predictable approval step each time, so nothing fills without you.
- Better field recognition should cut errors on nonstandard formats, from VIN boxes to passport date pickers.
Okay, so what’s next? Google says more data types are coming in the months ahead. For now, use it where it saves real time, and keep the confirmation step as your last mile of protection.
- Expect coverage to expand beyond IDs and vehicle data.
- On fussy forms, let Chrome try first, its upgraded parsing targets varied formats.
- Adenman
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