The biggest tech-giant Microsoft is known for making lives of people easier by providing them with an ample number of applications and services and in its recent update for Windows 10 (released this Tuesday), Microsoft has fixed a number of bugs enhancing the security in its Edge Web browser. Additionally, the company has also launched a dedicated portal on which it now showcases all the features and changes it seeds with the new Windows 10 update.
Microsoft released Windows 10 for the general public on July 29, 2015, and since then the company has been furiously making attempts at making its desktop and tablet OS interface easier for the users. To do so, the company used to release updates almost every week, but last year it abruptly stopped offering changelog with the new updates, something that irked many of the users.
However, with the new update (build number 10586.104) Microsoft has created a dedicated portal on its website to showcase Windows 10 update changes that list information about every Windows 10 update Microsoft has seeded to date.
Among the many things listed in the changelog for the latest Windows 10 update, one thing that surely will give a respite to users is the involvement of a security patch aimed at addressing vulnerabilities in Microsoft Edge. The official description read: "Fixed issue with Microsoft Edge browser caching visited URLs while using InPrivate browsing."
A security researcher last year reported flaws in Microsoft Edge, noting that the InPrivate feature on Microsoft's new default Web browser for Windows 10 leaks data, allowing an attacker to find out all the websites a user visits in his browsing session. After the revelation, Microsoft assured its users that it is constantly making amends and working on ways to resolve this bug.