You may get a warning if the site you try to visit is unsafe. These sites are often called phishing or malware sites.
Get warnings about unsafe sites
Phishing and malware detection is turned on by default in Chrome. When you encounter phishing, malware, unwanted software, or social engineering sites, you may get a red warning that says "Dangerous site." If you see this warning, we recommend that you don't visit the site.
To protect you from unsafe websites, Google Safe Browsing maintains a list of websites that might put you at risk for malware, abusive extensions, phishing, malicious and intrusive ads, and social engineering attacks.
To detect and warn you about known and new unsafe sites in real time, you can also turn on Enhanced Safe Browsing. Learn about Safe Browsing protection level in Chrome.
Tip: Download with caution. Some sites may tell you that you have a virus to get you to download harmful software. Be careful not to download any harmful software.
What warnings about unsafe sites mean
Unsafe sites are usually websites that trick you to do something dangerous online, like try to make you give away your passwords or personal information. They can harm your device or cause problems when you browse online.
These sites may be:
- Phishing
- Social engineering
- Trying to install malware or unwanted software on your computer
If you don't want to be warned about unsafe content, you can turn off Google Play Protect. This also turns off all your Android device's protection against harmful apps and content.
For security, we recommend that you always keep Google Play Protect on.
- On your Android device, open Google Play Store .
- Tap Menu Play Protect.
- Turn Scan device for security threats on or off.
When you visit an unsafe site
You can visit a page that is showing a warning. This is not recommended.
- On your Android device, open Chrome .
- On the page where you get a warning, tap Details Visit this unsafe site.
- The page will load.
Did you mean [site name]?
If you get this message, Chrome thinks that the web address may be for a different site than the one you expected.
The message may also say âIs this the right site?â or âFake site ahead.â
You get this message when the site you try to visit:
- Appears similar to a safe site you usually visit.
- Tries to trick you with a URL that is slightly changed from a known safe site.
- Has a URL that is slightly different from a URL in your browsing history.
If you think a page was flagged in error and you want to proceed to the site, select Yes, continue.
My site or software is marked dangerous or suspicious
- Site owner:
- If you own a site marked as dangerous: Follow the instructions to fix the problem and request a review.
- If you own a site that has been marked with a âDid you mean,â âIs this the right site, â or âFake site aheadâ warning: Follow the instructions to fix the problem and request a review.
- Software owner:
- If you're a software publisher and Chrome flags your downloads: Learn how to resolve malware issues with your downloads.