As spotted by Ctrl Blog’s Daniel Aleksandersen, the developer behind the popular EdgeDeflector app (a program that forces Windows to use your default browser), Brave’s v1.30.86 update addresses Microsoft’s Edge interception scheme by using EdgeDeflector-influenced code. Firefox may do the same with an upcoming update.
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Brave and Firefox gear up to battle Microsoft Edge
Microsoft is swapping out links in the Windows shell with “microsoft-edge:” instead of using “https:”, Aleksandersen explained. Edge is the only browser that recognizes these links, so even if your default browser is Google Chrome or Brave, the Edge browser opens instead. EdgeDeflector recognizes this and deters Microsoft’s interception by rewriting them back to “https:” links. As a result, your default web browser opens instead. Brave used similar logic for its recent update. “You no longer need to install EdgeDeflector if you’re using Brave as your default browser,” Aleksandersen said. “It’ll pop up as an option when you click on a microsoft-edge: link.” Interestingly, Brave is also planning on redirecting Windows Search links (which lead to Bing) to the users’ preferred search engine. However, Aleksandersen isn’t on board with that one. “It’s a bit icky because Brave Software benefits financially from directing more searches to its search provider partners, and its own Brave Search portal,” he said. Brave is the first internet crawler to tackle Microsoft’s link-hijacking subterfuge. Other browsers may follow Brave’s footsteps. Firefox, for example, is poised to implement a similar Edge-deflecting protocol, but it’s still under review as of this writing. It’ll be interesting to see how these browser wars play out. I’m sure Microsoft will be displeased with Brave if it does manage to redirect Bing-based Windows Search links — and the Redmond-based tech giant may not take this change laying down. If so, I’ll be right here with my popcorn watching Microsoft, Mozilla, Brave, Google and more fight for our attention.