Within the Techcommunity thread Eric Lawrence (product manager at Microsoft) writes: Since update 1.44 (just started) no more problems. German blog reader Sascha Anders wrote here: It was known from the Edge product manager, that Microsoft is working on a fix, but no release date was given. There is also a discussion within the Techcommunity at Microsoft. Some administrator has reported, that the group policies in Edge no longer work properly for individual users. I had addressed it only within my German blog post Edge Stable 1.37 macht Gruppenrichtlinien kaputt (Chrome-Bug). The browser should update automatically, but can also be downloaded from the Edge site. The release notes don't give any details about the update, but Edge 1.44 is based on Chromium 1.53, according to this page. Instead, the attacker would have to persuade the user to take an action, usually by sending an email or instant message, or by getting the user to open an attachment sent via email. In all cases, however, an attacker would have no way to force a user to view the attacker-controlled content. An attacker could host a specially crafted website designed to exploit the vulnerability through Microsoft Edge and then convince a user to view the website.
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