Microsoft Edge for Business continues its drive to become the most secure enterprise browser on the market, introducing a wave of new security connector integrations just in time for Cybersecurity Awareness Month. These enhancements make Edge a critical part of organizational Zero Trust strategies, transforming the browser from an isolated endpoint into a deeply integrated pillar of enterprise defense.
Arunesh Chandra, Principal Product Manager for Edge Enterprise, detailed the expanded connector availability in a recent official blog post. The update signifies Microsoft’s ongoing commitment to giving businesses flexible, cost-effective, and powerful ways to secure browser activity, especially as remote work and AI-driven workflows become the norm.
Browsers: The New Frontier for Enterprise Security
Every day, employees use the browser to access sensitive company resources, cloud apps, and AI-powered tools. This surge means that browsers have rapidly become one of the most critical — and vulnerable — attack vectors for organizations. Unfortunately, many traditional security tools have struggled to integrate directly with browsers, leaving gaps in Zero Trust protection that can be difficult to address.
Microsoft identified this challenge earlier this year and launched the Edge for Business security connector framework in April. The framework is designed to “make the browser a real part of your security strategy – and even strengthen it”. Instead of forcing IT teams to reinvent their security stack, Edge offers native hooks into existing solutions for authentication, Data Loss Prevention (DLP), monitoring, and reporting — all without increasing deployment complexity or licensing costs, although partner-specific fees may apply.
What’s New: 5 Additional Connectors
Microsoft’s latest announcement brings several major security providers into its connector ecosystem, all now generally available for deployment:
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Symantec Data Loss Prevention: This connector helps organizations identify, monitor, and safeguard sensitive or regulated data. IT teams can control what information is uploaded, pasted, or printed from the web, drastically reducing accidental data leakage.
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RSA ID Plus: Leveraging device signals from Edge, RSA ID Plus ensures that only verified, managed endpoints can access critical applications, essentially gating sensitive resources behind robust identity checks.
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Omnissa Access Device Trust Connector: With this integration, security admins can enforce conditional access to web, native, and virtual applications protected by Omnissa Access, all within the browser workflow.
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KnowBe4 SecurityCoach: This real-time security coach monitors risky browser activities, including unsafe site visits, password reuse, and malware downloads, and can prompt users to make safer choices as they work online.
For those looking to test the bleeding edge, Trellix DLP is now available in preview. Trellix’s integration applies endpoint DLP policies, providing content inspection capabilities for browser-based data exchanges. For organizations interested in piloting Trellix DLP, enabling the connector requires coordination with Trellix Customer Support and is not enabled by default for Windows DLP Endpoint version 11.12.0.
Unified Management: Simplicity at Scale
One of the standout benefits of Edge for Business connectors is the frictionless deployment and management experience. All connectors are configured through the Edge management service in the Microsoft 365 admin center. Setup is simple: admins just select the needed solution, follow the guided prompts, and tailor policies to fit organizational needs. Once deployed, Edge for Business acts as a secure, transparent extension of the wider security stack — at no additional cost from Microsoft’s side.
This means IT departments can quickly address browser security gaps without massive overhead or disruptive workflow changes. Existing investments in authentication, reporting, and DLP technologies become instantly more potent, surrounded by Edge’s unique security infrastructure.
Impact: Making the Browser a Core Security Layer
For Chief Information Security Officers (CISOs), strengthening browser security has never been easier or more urgent. The browser’s integration with familiar partner products (Symantec, RSA, Omnissa, KnowBe4, Trellix) introduces powerful new capabilities with minimal disruption. Risk monitoring, endpoint verification, and sophisticated DLP controls are just a few clicks away.
This approach supports the Zero Trust philosophy, ensuring every browser transaction is authenticated and monitored, every download inspected, and every user action checked against policy. Rather than piecing together protections from disparate systems, Edge for Business centralizes security and reporting — making compliance audits and incident investigations more manageable and effective.
Cybersecurity Awareness Month: Perfect Timing for Upgrades
October is Cybersecurity Awareness Month, and according to Chandra, the timing is ideal for organizations to evaluate and upgrade their browser security posture. Edge for Business’s expanded connector menu lets companies plug browser activity into the tools they already trust — eliminating the “fragmented” approach that has long frustrated enterprise IT teams.
To help customers get started, Microsoft invites readers to explore their dedicated security connectors page, where additional guidance and FAQs are available.
Market Leadership: Microsoft Edge For Business’s Rising Profile
In a compelling follow-up, Microsoft revealed that it has been recognized as a leader in the IDC MarketScape: Worldwide Application Streaming and Enterprise Browsers 2025 Vendor Assessment. More details are promised in an upcoming blog, further cementing Edge for Business’s rising role in the enterprise browser market.
The recognition comes as Edge sharpens its focus on security, productivity, and privacy — positioning itself as the go-to browser for digitally transformed workplaces.
Getting Started: Secure Your Browser Today
Security should be foundational, not fragmented. The browser is a critical endpoint, and Microsoft is committed to helping enterprises guard it with proven, integrated tools. For organizations eager to deploy these new connectors, the process is straightforward within the Microsoft 365 admin center.
Microsoft recommends reviewing partner license requirements for each connector, and working directly with solution providers (especially Trellix) for specific enablement procedures.
Stay tuned for more updates as Microsoft Edge continues to define the future of secure enterprise browsing.
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