Tech Advisor

Microsoft begins blocking ‘unwanted apps’, using Edge

The new anti-PUA (Potentiall­y Unwanted Apps) feature must be manually toggled on, however. MARK HACHMAN reports

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Beginning with the current version of Microsoft Edge, Microsoft will begin blocking adware, Bitcoin miners, and other unwanted apps that sometimes accompany apps that users download from the web.

Microsoft Edge version 80 contains a new Settings menu with the option to ‘Block potentiall­y unwanted apps’, which works in conjunctio­n with Windows’ Microsoft Defender SmartScree­n to detect and warn against what Microsoft calls PUAs, or Potentiall­y Unwanted Apps. (Microsoft has listed what it considers to be common PUAs at fave.co/2vWE3vO.)

If turned on, Edge will block these apps by default, though you’ll have the option to override Microsoft’s decision and allow the app to download and install.

The new option takes Windows’ own built-in protection in a different direction. To date, Microsoft’s efforts have been focused primarily on malware. The company’s answer to that has been the Microsoft Store, which has a list of curated apps that Microsoft

has already approved. But far more applicatio­ns can be downloaded from third-party app stores or from the web itself, where users must depend on the trustworth­iness of the app’s author.

Microsoft makes clear, moreover, that PUAs are not malware, per se. Adware or cryptomine­rs don’t necessaril­y harm your PC; they simply slow it down. Some anti-malware applicatio­ns already identify applicatio­ns like cryptomine­rs and block them. Microsoft’s code now attempts to sniff out piggybacke­d applicatio­ns that come bundled with apps that are otherwise harmless.

Edge’s protection­s against PUAs are off by default, though they can be turned on by going to Edge’s Settings menu, then to Privacy and Services > Services > Block potentiall­y unwanted apps. If a PUA is detected, you’ll see a notificati­on, like the images shown in this article. You’ll then have the option to reject the app entirely or let Microsoft know that it’s okay to download. Microsoft will take this feedback and incorporat­e it, Microsoft said in a blog post (fave.co/2TPj59W).

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 ??  ?? Microsoft’s new PUA protection­s live in the Settings menu
Microsoft’s new PUA protection­s live in the Settings menu
 ??  ?? If Edge detects a PUA, it will pop up this notificati­on. You can click the ellipsis menu to white-list it
If Edge detects a PUA, it will pop up this notificati­on. You can click the ellipsis menu to white-list it

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