1. Update Your Chromebook
As with any operating system, installing regular updates is critical to the overall health and security of your device. Generally, your Chromebook will automatically look for available updates. You will be notified if an update is available, which makes keeping things up to date easy. You simply have to restart the Chromebook to update it. You can also periodically check for updates manually as shown below:
2. Use a PIN Instead of a Password
Typically, Chromebooks use the same password as your Google account for logging in. We recommend replacing this barrier with a PIN. Then, use the same PIN to sign in to Chromebook every time. In case you forget your PIN, you can still sign in with your Google account password by clicking on the “Switch to password” option on the login screen. If you forget both PIN and password, you will have to factory reset your Chromebook.
3. Show Lock Screen After Waking Up From Sleep
Generally, when you close the lid of your Chromebook, the device will go to sleep. When you reopen it, it doesn’t ask for a password. This isn’t safe as anyone can then access your Chromebook. To fix this problem, force the device to show the lock screen, that requires you to enter your password, when waking it up from sleep. If you’re stepping away from your device for a bit, use the Search + L keyboard shortcut to lock your Chromebook instantly.
4. Take Advantage of Guest Mode
Does someone want to borrow your Chromebook? I would be apprehensive about such a request had it not been for the availability of the Guest mode. The Guest mode on Chromebook offers an easy and secure way to let others use your Chromebook temporarily without allowing them to fidget with your personal documents, apps, settings, or other Google products. Guest mode creates a separate profile to allow the temporary user to use your Chromebook. It doesn’t require signing in to a Google account and offers an empty slate to the guest user without any existing apps or history. Guest users cannot install or uninstall apps. What makes this mode more interesting is that once a user signs out of guest mode, Chrome OS erases all the traces of their session. It deletes their browsing history, downloads, customized settings, etc. A new guest user will again get a blank profile. To log in to a guest profile, power on your Chromebook, and on the login screen, click on “Browse as Guest.” To switch to the guest mode when you are signed in to the main account on Chromebook, first click on the time at the bottom-right corner and hit the “Sign out” button. You will now reach the lock screen. Click on the “Browse as Guest” button at the bottom. If you don’t see the guest browsing option, go to “Settings → Security and privacy → Manage other people” and turn on the toggle for “Enable guest browsing.”
5. Restrict Sign-in to Selected Users
If multiple users have access to your Chromebook via their own user profiles, but you don’t want everyone to sign in, you can restrict sign-in to only a few users. Enabling this feature adds another layer of security by removing the “Add Person” option from the lock screen, which would otherwise allow anyone to create a new user profile on your Chromebook.
6. Secure Chrome Browser
The Chrome browser is the heart and soul of a Chromebook. You must secure and protect it in order to protect your Chromebook. Firstly, uninstall any old or unused extensions and install a few of these top Chrome security and privacy extensions. Visit “More -> More Tools -> Extensions” in Chrome to manage your extensions. Secondly, enable Safe Browsing by going to “Chrome Settings -> Privacy and Security.” Turn on Enhanced protection or at least Standard protection in the Safe Browsing section.
Lost Your Chromebook? Sign Out Remotely
If your Chromebook gets stolen, misplaced, or comes into the wrong hands, you can sign out of your Chromebook remotely from another device. This won’t help you recover your Chromebook but at least your data will remain safe. 4. Select the entry for your Chromebook. 5. Click on the “Sign out” button assigned to it. For example, Chromebooks offer “sandboxing” to keep tabs/apps isolated from one another. Even if one tab or app is infected, it won’t affect others. Secondly, Chromebooks verify their boot process, i.e., Chrome OS checks the system startup to ensure that the operating system has not been tampered with. If it detects anything wrong in the system, it repairs itself automatically.