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Brave browser for mac os
Brave browser for mac os












Mozilla Firefox doesn’t currently have this issue. e.g.ĭefaults write URLAllowlist -array-add 'x-devonthink://*' 'zoommtg://*' 'anotherprotocol://*'įor Brave Browser: defaults write URLAllowlist -array-add 'x-devonthink://*'ĭefaults write URLAllowlist -array-add 'zoommtg://*'ĭefaults write URLAllowlist -array-add 'x-devonthink://*' 'zoommtg://*' 'anotherprotocol://*' or you can add multiple in one command. If you have a version of Chrome older than v86, please adjust the command accordingly (use URLWhitelist).įor Google Chrome (< version 100): defaults write URLAllowlist -array-add 'x-devonthink://*'ĭefaults write URLAllowlist -array-add 'zoommtg://*' Note that URLWhitelist will work for older version of Chrome, from versions 15 to 100 and, URLAllowList will work on version 86 and above. But as of Chrome version 100 and above, only URLAllowlist works. UPDATE: Since October 2020 (when version 86 of Chrome was rolled out) it’s been possible to use either URLWhitelist (info here), or URLAllowlist (info here). You can apply this solution for any other application, so long as you can figure out what its application handler is, and its com file name. It utilises a Chrome policy, which is easily modified via the macOS command line.

brave browser for mac os

Here’s the solution for DevonThink and for Zoom. The issue being, it’s useless trying to whitelist the current URI. So any third party application (Zotero, for example) that you launch manually in order to do something with the current URI is going to have this same issue. Once DevonThink launches it will take a copy of the current webpage, PDF document, etc. But other applications like DevonThink, the application is launched when you click on the icon for the DevonThink browser extension, and the URI active in the browser at that moment could be absolutely anything. It has an “Always allow” checkbox, which works fine with for applications like Zoom, since it’s always the same URI domain that will be trying to open Zoom (it’s the URI you click on for a meeting link). The prompt looks like this: An example of the external application prompt

brave browser for mac os

Chromium based browsers such as Google Chrome and Brave Browser require the user to confirm whether they want to allow a URI to open an external application, such as Skype, Zoom, DevonThink, the Apple App Store app, etc.














Brave browser for mac os