MicroSoft Edge will have a feature that Chrome will not be able to match.



Microsoft Edge may have worked out a way to live up to its name and beat Google Chrome. The latest beta version of Microsoft
Edge reveals that the browser can restrict (if not block) autoplaying videos on websites by default.

We've all seen those clips that no one asked for and that make your brain scratch like a record needle when they start playing out of nowhere.

This knowledge comes from Techdows, which discovered a shift in the Chromium-based Edge Canary build. In Edge build 91.0.841.0 or higher, there are two choices under Media Autoplay: (1) Allow and Restrict, and (2) New default.

As you might know, "Allow" and "Limit" are not the same as "Block." There used to be a Block option, but it's now hidden behind a flag that you have to activate first. And it seems to have never worked properly. However, this may just be a test. Beta versions of goods also only demonstrate what a company is considering, not what it can do in the long run.

However, there is no justification for Microsoft Edge to ignore Autoplay. It would almost certainly be the most significant moment in Microsoft's current browser's brief existence if it launched an ad campaign criticizing chrome's auto-playing images.

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