Is Microsoft Retaliating For Chrome's Warnings About Extension Security in Edge? (pcworld.com) 40
Several pundits criticized Google for warning Edge users to switch to Chrome if they wanted to use Chrome extensions "securely". "In Chrome, a plugin can be remotely disabled by the Chrome team if it's considered unsafe for whatever reason," notes PC World. "Google lacks the ability to remotely disable the same plugin within Edge, prompting Google to recommend switching to Chrome, a source close to Google said."
Though PC World notes that Google isn't giving the same warning to Opera users...
Yet now when you try to add Chrome Extensions to Edge, Microsoft also gives you a warning of its own -- that extensions installed from sources other than the Microsoft Store "are unverified [by Microsoft], and may affect browser performance." And while Google.com is still displaying an ad for Chrome to web surfers using Edge, now if you search for "Chrome web store" on Bing, the first result is an ad ("promoted by Microsoft") for Microsoft's own Edge browser.
ZDNet's Chris Matyszczyk asked both Google and Microsoft for a comment: [N]othing from Google. But suddenly, a confirmation from Microsoft that it wouldn't offer official comment. My sniffings around Google suggest the company may have been taken aback by the positive public reaction to Edge... My nasal probings around Redmond offer the reasoning that, well, Microsoft hasn't tested or verified extensions that arrive from places other than they Microsoft Edge add-ons website. Why, they're far too busy to do that. And, well, it's the Chrome web store. Who knows what you'll find over there? Oh, and Edge gives you more control over your data, so there.
Could it be, then, that Google is being vacuously childish and trying to scare people into resisting the lures of Microsoft's browser handiwork? Could it also be that Microsoft is doing something rather similar in either retaliation or merely homage to the brutally competitive instincts of social activist Bill Gates?
Could it be that both of these companies should pause to examine their consciences, go sit in a corner and embrace their customers' needs and choices a touch more fully?
Though PC World notes that Google isn't giving the same warning to Opera users...
Yet now when you try to add Chrome Extensions to Edge, Microsoft also gives you a warning of its own -- that extensions installed from sources other than the Microsoft Store "are unverified [by Microsoft], and may affect browser performance." And while Google.com is still displaying an ad for Chrome to web surfers using Edge, now if you search for "Chrome web store" on Bing, the first result is an ad ("promoted by Microsoft") for Microsoft's own Edge browser.
ZDNet's Chris Matyszczyk asked both Google and Microsoft for a comment: [N]othing from Google. But suddenly, a confirmation from Microsoft that it wouldn't offer official comment. My sniffings around Google suggest the company may have been taken aback by the positive public reaction to Edge... My nasal probings around Redmond offer the reasoning that, well, Microsoft hasn't tested or verified extensions that arrive from places other than they Microsoft Edge add-ons website. Why, they're far too busy to do that. And, well, it's the Chrome web store. Who knows what you'll find over there? Oh, and Edge gives you more control over your data, so there.
Could it be, then, that Google is being vacuously childish and trying to scare people into resisting the lures of Microsoft's browser handiwork? Could it also be that Microsoft is doing something rather similar in either retaliation or merely homage to the brutally competitive instincts of social activist Bill Gates?
Could it be that both of these companies should pause to examine their consciences, go sit in a corner and embrace their customers' needs and choices a touch more fully?
Re: Google should look in the mirror and shill out (Score:4, Insightful)
If MS want's to offset Google's cost (Score:2)
Re:If MS want's to offset Google's cost (Score:4, Informative)
Yeah, it's not as if Google takes a 30% cut of all sales and 15% of all other transactions from the Play Store, making it a profit center for them...
Oh, wait - they do.
Re: (Score:2)
Chrome extensions don't come from the Play Store, they are on the Web Store. The Web Store doesn't have any way to sell extensions, they are all free or ad supported.
Nice pissing match (Score:3)
Let me grab my popcorn while two multi-billion dollar companies get into a pissing match...
On second thought, I'll switch channels.
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Now that is exactly what is happening. Most users are simply get pissed off with Google and M$ and the two are now fighting for a shrinking base. The rest of the world is looking to develop their own and push Google and M$ out from the majority of the market, with the Government of China making a big push against both companies, promoting local development very aggressively and Russia and India are also in there (a million coders working on FOSS and social media that is not US based).
They will become incre
Re:Nice pissing match (Score:4, Insightful)
M$ will either have to stop it's privacy invasive and control freak practices or it will lose more and more ground to Google as Google itself loses ground in the rest of the world.
Funny, I've always considered Google to be the bigger privacy rapist [urbandictionary.com] between the two companies.
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By extension, does that make Facebook the Marquis de Sade of privacy?
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By extension, does that make Facebook the Marquis de Sade of privacy?
Nah, it makes them Privacy Rapists 1.0 [slashdot.org]
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Have you taken a look at some of the 'telemetry' functions in Windows 10? Under default settings, among other things, Microsoft gets to see every URL you visit (for Smartscreen purposes), every launching and every exiting of a WinRT program, and every query typed into the start menu. Both companies are very heavy on the spying.
Re: Nice pissing match (Score:1)
Re: Nice pissing match (Score:1)
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Are you kidding? Microsoft built spyware into the OS. They don't even hide it, they extensively document it: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-... [microsoft.com]
So far nobody has been able to show any evidence that Google does anything without consent or that Chrome is spyware. I keep asking but I'm forced to conclude that the evidence just doesn't exist.
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So far nobody has been able to show any evidence that Google does anything without consent or that Chrome is spyware. I keep asking but I'm forced to conclude that the evidence just doesn't exist.
Do a search on Google's search engine (you know, the one thing they're best known for), and see exactly where all the result links take you first.
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Only the NSA wins.
Ha (Score:2)
Could it be that both of these companies should pause to examine their consciences, go sit in a corner and embrace their customers' needs and choices a touch more fully?
Funniest thing I've read all week.
Microsoft would have more leverage here (Score:2, Informative)
if their new browser wasn't based on Google Chrome to begin with.
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But that's the reason why it makes sense for the warning to be issued (or not) regardless of whether it's Opera or Microsoft's browser. They're both Chrome-based. So either being based on Chrome makes both secure, or neither.
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As the summary explains it's the ability of Google to remotely uninstall extensions that it finds to be malware that is the issue.
Also there might be issues with the changes that Microsoft made to the code. They might have also made it better.
I just wish someone would make Firefox mobile better.
Re: Microsoft would have more leverage here (Score:2)
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They forked it, yes?
I don't believe they forked Chromium - they're just skinning it. So basically it's the same as Chrome or Opera, but with Edge's skin layered over the top. And when Google patches a security bug in Chrome's core, it means Edge will get that patch too.
So, yeah - Google's being disingenuous about security. But Microsoft is being petulant as well. Basically, these two huge corporations are behaving like spoiled children.
Re: Microsoft would have more leverage here (Score:2)
Either way, they both have their own "Store" and can't be held responsible for stuff in the other store. That's just common sense. It's not unfair for both to display a message when going to a
Interesting quote. (Score:5, Interesting)
"Google lacks the ability to remotely disable the same plugin within Edge, prompting Google to recommend switching to Chrome, a source close to Google said."
Or in other words "We're unable to remotely brick your stuff without warning if you use Edge. Use our stuff!"
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Makes sense to me (Score:2)
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HELLO MR THOMPSON (Score:1)
I imagine Mozilla pulling their hair out over this. It reminds me of two separate scenes from the Simpsons:
* The one where Kang and the other alien are the two main-party candidates for the US presidential election, and even when people find them out, they decide to vote for one of them anyway rather than a 3rd party candidate.
* The one where a government witness relocation program agent is trying to train Homer to respond to "Hello, Mr. Thompson" ("Thompson" being his new surname) by stamping on his foot w
People use Opera (Score:2)
lol no, no one actually uses opera, it was a cool thing to say like 15 years ago but yea
Re: (Score:1)
Umm, I'm reading this in Opera.
"vacuously childish"??? (Score:2)
I'm not privy to Google's internal thinking. So they could very well be being childish. But urging the public to stay the hell away from Microsoft's browser offerings is anything but vacuous. It's just good and common sense. Seriously, as many times as we've been burned by that trash, a tech journalist should already know that it's a given that the best way to treat Microsoft browsers is as if they were day-old road kill.