Microsoft has
turned on a new set of Windows Tips that inform Chrome and Firefox users on
Windows 10 that Edge is a “safer” browser. We reached out to Microsoft to find
out how long this latest recommendation has been active. “This wave of Windows
Tips for Windows 10 users began in early November,” a Microsoft spokesperson
told Venture Beat.
If this sounds
familiar, that’s because Microsoft turned on similar Windows 10 tips back in
July, warning Chrome/Firefox users about battery drain and then recommending
Edge instead. Those notifications were on the battery icon in the operating
system, while this new one is on the Edge icon
Reddit user by
“illCodeYouABrain” noted the prompt happened when launching Firefox, although
not every time. We confirmed with Microsoft that the same “tip” was active for
Chrome as well.
In July, a
Microsoft spokesperson told us that “these Windows Tips notifications were
created to provide people with quick, easy information that can help them
enhance their Windows 10 experience.” This time, the spokesperson added that
Windows 10 users can always change default settings and preferences, including
turning off these notifications in their system’s settings (for those
interested, open the Settings app => System => Notifications =>
Disable “Get tips, tricks and suggestions as you use Windows”).
The battery drain
“tip” was timed with Microsoft’s battery-savings campaign for Edge, and this
security one is no different. NSS Labs compared the security of the three major
Windows browsers and unsurprisingly — Microsoft has a long history of asking
NSS Labs to do a study in which its browser comes out on top, though it claims
this one wasn’t commissioned — Edge won in a particular metric. That’s where
the “It blocks 21% more socially engineered malware” part from the notification
comes from.
Security is of
utmost importance in browsers, and Edge is actually quite secure. For a long
time now, Microsoft has been pushing the envelope in security, and it’s
understandable the company wants to highlight that. But as we noted last time,
leveraging notifications within Windows 10 to promote cherry-picked results
could be seen as poor practice. Google and Mozilla don’t have the option to do
the same in Windows 10 if they want to highlight the strengths of Chrome or
Firefox, respectively.
We’re already
used to Google’s search engine pushing Chrome, Yahoo linking to Firefox, and
Bing recommending Edge. This year, Microsoft has upped the ante in the browser
war with Windows 10.
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