New Edge Feature: Limit Automatic Playback of Sound or Video

The webs have more and more multimedia content. It is often easy to find pages with more embedded videos or with more sound effects or audios that give these websites great dynamism. The problem with this is the malpractice of those responsible and the developers . The normal thing is that the video is available (embedded in the middle of the text, for example) but it only plays when we click on it. However, some websites choose to play the video automatically when entering the page, without our permission. And this ends up tiring users. Now, thanks to Edge , this is going to end.

Last week, Microsoft released a new version of Edge , 92. This version brought with it a lot of changes, improvements and novelties of all kinds, both for home users and developers. Some of the new features are available to all users by default, while others only appear in the form of experiments , or flags. The new way of dealing with embedded videos within pages is precisely one of these experimental features.

New Edge Feature: Limit Automatic Playback of Sound or Video

This is how the videos will be loaded on the new Edge 92

By default, the new Edge will block the automatic playback of videos the first time we enter a page. For example, if we enter YouTube for the first time, the videos will not play automatically. However, the moment we interact with the videos (that is, we play them for the first time), they will begin to play by default the next times we enter the page.

We can modify this behavior thanks to an experimental function, flag, included in this new version of the browser. We must activate it from the following flag:

edge://flags/#edge-autoplay-user-setting-block-option

Once this flag is activated, and the browser restarted, we will have a new option within the Settings panel of the browser. We can get to it by directly typing the following in the taskbar:

edge://settings/content/mediaAutoplay

Edge reproducción automática contenido

Here we will have 3 options:

  • Allow : enable autoplay always.
  • Limit : only allow autoplay on sites we have previously visited.
  • Lock : Lock all autoplay, both the first time and subsequent times.

We can choose the behavior we want so that we no longer have to worry about autoplaying content.

A novelty not so new, but to be appreciated

Of course, many users will appreciate this novelty when navigating the pages. Until now it was possible to achieve a similar effect thanks to the use of extensions. However, from now on, we can have it as one more feature of Microsoft’s browser.

However, although it may seem like it, it is not a novelty never seen before. Safari, Apple‘s browser, was the first to bring this feature to users, followed, of course, by Firefox . Any user of these two browsers can enjoy blocking the automatic playback of videos and unwanted content automatically for a long time.

Meanwhile, if we are Google Chrome users and we want this possibility, we can achieve it with the use of an extension like AutoplayStopper . Likewise, in the not too distant future, we may find a similar function natively in the Google browser.