For what it's worth, there does not exist a "standard internet browser," assuming that means an application that adheres to all relevant web standards. No piece of software exists (at least not publicly) that even adheres to the entirety of any single relevant web standard (e.g. HTML, CSS, ECMAScript, etc.), as far as I know.
Maybe for a few small things like JSON, I suppose, but not for any of the major standards. And not just as in they implement a superset of the standards - every browser implements a distinct set of each standard that is neither a subset nor a superset.
I'm still not a fan of Chrome nor the effect it has on the web.
The standard so far is to respect existing standards still in use, peoples effort and work done already - but not to outsource bug fixing costs by forcing any of that to be redone or lost.