The latest Edge Canary version started disabling Manifest V2-based extensions with the following message: “This extension is no longer supported. Microsoft Edge recommends that you remove it.” Although the browser turns off old extensions without asking, you can still make them work by clicking “Manage extension” and toggling it back (you will have to acknowledge another prompt).

At this point, it is not entirely clear what is going on. Google started phasing out Manifest V2 extensions in June 2024, and it has a clear roadmap for the process. Microsoft’s documentation, however, still says “TBD,” so the exact dates are not known yet. This leads to some speculating about the situation being one of “unexpected changes” coming from Chromium. Either way, sooner or later, Microsoft will ditch MV2-based extensions, so get ready as we wait for Microsoft to shine some light on its plans.

Another thing worth noting is that the change does not appear to be affecting Edge’s stable release or Beta/Dev Channels. For now, only Canary versions disable uBlock Origin and other MV2 extensions, leaving users a way to toggle them back on. Also, the uBlock Origin is still available in the Edge Add-ons store

2 points
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Vivaldi still supports V2 Manifest (including ublock Origin) until July, I believe. Brave too, I think.

edit: I find it fascinating how mentions of Vivaldi (or other browsers) always gets so many downvotes. Why do downvoters care so much about browsers they don’t use?

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23 points

Because we want a more permanent solution than one that’s only going to last until Summer. What’s even the point of switching if you just gotta do it again soon?

Edit: Winter too. I apologize to our friends on the southern hemisphere.

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-5 points

Wait, is that all? Because its not a permanent forever fix for Edge users its downvote worthy?

  • Maybe Vivaldi or Brave users are reading this article thinking their Manifest v2 support is ending at the same time as Edge? It isn’t and I’m letting those users know.

  • Maybe there is some critical functionality someone needs in a Chrome based browser and they’ll take Manifest v2 support wherever they can get it for as long as they can?

Do you think your specific situation, and therefore your specific desired solution, is the only one in the world that exists?

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8 points

Because its not a permanent forever fix for Edge users its downvote worthy?

Yes.

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1 point

I had a feeling this would happen. I have to use Google services for a lot of things at work and Edge works fine with them. Firefox usually does okay, but not always. And now Firefox is requiring you to hand over your data to them.

Can any Chromium-based browser refuse to turn on V3 or is it too baked-in without forking the entire project?

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4 points

And now Firefox is requiring you to hand over your data to them.

If you’re talking about the recent news, that’s not what the updated privacy notice says.

Mozilla will be adding opt in LLM functionality to Firefox. It can use third party LLM providers. The privacy has been updated to say “btw, any info you give to this LLM will be processed by the LLM by a third party.” I.e. the LLM provider has the data once you send it to them.

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18 points

And now Firefox is requiring you to hand over your data to them.

If you’re talking about the most recent news about the Terms of Service, that is a gross misreading of what they said.

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9 points

That’s not what that Firefox thing was about at all.

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2 points

I imagine so, but the technical burden is at risk of growing over time as the upstream chromium may significantly deviate from or remove some of the functionality.

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3 points

IIRC Vivaldi and Brave promised to prolong it for a year.

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1 point

Test-driving them both now.

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0 points
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Deleted by creator
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1 point

I’d direct people to Firefox, but Mozilla is doing some weird shit right now and I just can’t. And the forks are always with some weird limitations or issues. Why does it all have to be shit these days?

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-3 points

Me and my colleagues in tech call it the ‘Granny Browser’.

Either use Firefox/UBlock Origin or Brave. Brave’s native adblock is good enough you don’t need add-ons.

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39 points

I dont know why people keep recommending brave.

its a fucking scummy fucking browser that has a history of stealing money, hijacking referal codes (like honey just got in deep trouble over), installing unnecessary software without consent and more.

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0 points

They really only recommend it because the average joe doesn’t need to install UBO on it, I also removed it after the VPN service controversy.

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-5 points

Because it’s a good product.

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-8 points

I dont know why people keep recommending brave.

Because it’s good.

its a fucking scummy fucking browser that has a history of stealing money, hijacking referal codes (like honey just got in deep trouble over), installing unnecessary software without consent and more.

Bullshit.

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14 points

Are you implying the crypto-bro browser with connections to a billionaire that runs the largest corporate intelligence agency in the world may not be the best choice of browser? That’s not the sort of attitude that generates value for the shareholders.

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8 points

My friends who are less tech literate swear by brave. I think it’s the way they market their browser… Some of Brave’s core audience don’t want to install a third party extension for adblock (either they don’t like third party or they just don’t know they can do it in other browsers)

Also on opening a new tab, they show the stats of how much data they saved and how much ads it blocked. Some people like seeing the number grow.

All this is my speculation. There may be some other reason for it being this popular.

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-4 points

There may be some other reason for it being this popular.

Because it just works fine and block ads by default, maybe? A wild guess, I know. /s

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5 points

If it’s being heavily marketed, that’s a red flag.

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1 point

My friends who are less tech literate swear by brave

I am entirely unshocked that people who don’t know shit, swear by bad products and scams.

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