Skip to main content

Microsoft Edge’s free VPN may become its must-have feature

Can a free VPN service that’s built into a browser lure you away from Google’s popular Chrome? Microsoft hopes so, as the company is starting to roll out an experimental VPN service to its Edge browser called the Microsoft Edge Secure Network Service that’s designed around privacy and security.

Unlike popular VPN services that protect all traffic from your smartphone, tablet, or laptop, Microsoft’s Edge Secure Network Service only safeguards traffic originating from the company’s Microsoft Edge browser, which originally debuted with Windows 10.

The Microsoft Edge browser on a flat surface.
Microsoft

The company promises that the Edge Secure Network Service will help encrypt your connection and enhance your privacy while browsing the internet by preventing online tracking and keeping your location private. The best part is that unlike the built-in browser VPN service from rival Mozilla with Firefox, the Microsoft Edge offering is free.

Recommended Videos

“Microsoft Edge helps keep you safe online,” the company wrote in a support page about its new service for the Edge browser. “However, the networks you join may not be adequately secure. Microsoft Edge Secure Network can help you protect your device and sensitive data as you browse.”

The caveat with this free service is that it is limited to just 1GB of browsing data per month when you’re signed into Edge with your Microsoft account. Given the low limit, you may not want to funnel all traffic through the VPN, and you’ll just want to enable the service when you’re dealing with personal, private, or sensitive data, like financial transactions and online banking.

The low limit could make the VPN offering less appealing for more nefarious uses, like those who want to hide their identity for illegal downloads and streams.

According to Microsoft, the Edge Secure Network is powered by Cloudflare, which promises that data collected will be deleted every 25 hours. Cloudflare also operates its own WARP VPN service in addition to powering Microsoft’s browser-based solution for Edge.

“When using Microsoft Edge Secure network, your data is routed from Edge through an encrypted tunnel to create a secure connection, even when using a non-secure URL that starts with HTTP,” the Windows maker explained of its new service. “This makes it harder for hackers to access your browsing data on a shared public Wi-Fi network.”

The service also creates a virtual IP address that replaces your geolocation data with a similar regional address to make it harder for online trackers to guess your specific location, Microsoft said.

Beyond the 1GB monthly data limit, Microsoft did not give details if an optional paid tier will be offered for heavy users, or if users would just be cut off from VPN access until the following month when your usage resets. Though Microsoft’s Edge still trails Google’s Chrome by a long shot, the company’s browser has been making inroads for users.

According to data from StatCounter, Google Chrome commanded about 67% of the market during the period from March 2021 to March 2022. Edge beat out both Mozilla Firefox and Apple’s Safari, finishing in second place with a market penetration of just shy of 10% during the same period.

The new Edge browser VPN is currently in preview and isn’t widely available to all Edge users on Windows 10 and Windows 11 operating systems. Edge is also available on other platforms, including iOS, Android, and MacOS. Microsoft has not revealed details about when the service will launch officially for all users. The service also competes against Opera‘s free browser-based VPN solution.

Chuong Nguyen
Silicon Valley-based technology reporter and Giants baseball fan who splits his time between Northern California and Southern…
Google is testing a feature that will let AI hide away internet pop-ups
Google Chrome browser running on Android Automotive in a car.

Google is testing a new feature in Chrome Canary, the experimental version of the Chrome browser. As reported by TechRadar, the "PermissionsAI" feature is designed to deal with pop-ups from websites asking you to share your location or consent to notifications.

According to Chromium, the tool will use Google's "Permission Predictions Service" and Gemini Nano v2 to analyze users' previous responses to pop-ups and guess how they will respond to new ones. If you're likely to decline, the feature will block the annoying pop-up that appears in the middle of your screen and instead hide it away in a corner in case you need it later.

Read more
Microsoft may have found a sneaky way to make you use Bing
The new Bing preview screen appears on a Surface Laptop Studio.

Microsoft is trying out a pretty unusual strategy to stop Bing users from switching to Google when they need to search for something. As spotted by Reddit users, and reported on by Windows Latest, if you type "Google" into Bing right now, you'll be taken to a results page with a special header that happens to look similar to the Google search bar.

The page even loads with Bing's top search bar hidden -- you need to scroll up to make it appear. Since what you're looking at is actually Bing, it doesn't say "Google" above the centered search bar. Still, the style of the search bar and the illustration is similar to what you might often find in Google.

Read more
Microsoft is, once again, trying to force users into using Edge
Microsoft Edge on a laptop on a couch.

Microsoft has deployed no shortage of tactics to get Windows users onto its Edge browser, and although some of the more nefarious methods of trying to force users to pick up the browser have failed, the company is still experimenting with new methods. The latest route launches Edge automatically on your PC on startup and prompts users to continually import data from Chrome, including your history, bookmarks, and tabs.

Richard Lawler from The Verge spotted the prompt, which showed up earlier this year without explanation before disappearing. It's back now, and in an official capacity from Microsoft. "This is a notification giving people the choice to import data from other browsers," said Microsoft's Caitlin Roulston in a statement to The Verge.

Read more