What? No, it doesn't.
Sounds like a personal problem to me, I've never had anything stolen from me online, not passwords, credit card info or anything like that. The only info it collects is pretty much websites you browse and your passwords and guess what? Every other browser does it too.
Sorry sir but chrome records a lot of other informations not just your password but aswell everything.
Judging by your comment is obvious that you does not have any kind of knowledgement of how chrome works, usarnames, everything you write on the browser.
Every single website even if you use Ctrl+N still is recorded and they make an profile about you, along with other personal information this is how chromes works, chromes connects to other websites on the background as well.
It's like there's someome behind you when you browse using chrome.
it's not a matter of personal problem is matter of security.
"n essence, Google is expanding the concept of an "open Internet" to not only mean an open "dumb" pipe of ISP bandwidth to every edge computer, but also an open "dumb" gateway that provides only Google automatic unencumbered access into the inside of every Chrome-enabled computer -- including its private contents.
(Apparently Google has concluded that to fulfill its mission "to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful" it must be able to seize access to whatever information it wants, whenever it wants, without the permission of its owners.)
Simply, Google effectively has established "master key access" to all Chrome users computers and then left them unlocked for Google's sole purposes.
Looked at yet another way, Google has created what is potentially a 30 million plus Google botnet of Chromed-computers.
Moreover, Google has effectively constructed a Chrome botnet that is not that dissimilar in capability to bad-actor botnets that can distribute viruses, worms, trojans, spyware, spam, key-stroke logging malware, p-2-p file-sharing, etc.
The primary difference here is that Google claims its botnet is a good botnet run by good guys with good intentions.
The huge problem with that difference is that "security is Google's Achilles heel" (as I have documented in a seven-part research series).
This means if Chrome is ever hacked, (and according to Google, the Chinese have already successfully hacked Google), Google has essentially left all Chrome users completely vulnerable to whatever the hacker wants to automatically push out to Google's 30 million-plus Chrome users.
By blowing off the common sense, best-practice safety-net of respecting the need for permission and authorization from users before reconfiguring their software and potentially gaining access to all their information, Google has put all Chrome users at the mercy the inviolability of Google's security -- security that has already been proven by the Chinese to be porous."
Edited by Dαrkrєrsŧ, 02 March 2013 - 01:23 PM.