

Symantec DLP 25.1 just became the first data protection solution to support Google Chrome Enterprise, Microsoft Edge for Business, and Mozilla Firefox for Enterprise via native APIs
Behold the trusty web browser: workhorse of the enterprise. It’s where employees share documents, conduct research and collaborate in SaaS apps. And more and more, it’s where they interact with generative AI. The browser’s central role makes it one of the most important—and riskiest—gateways to corporate data.
This comes as no surprise to security teams in charge of Data Loss Prevention (DLP) efforts. Endpoint DLP solutions monitor what employees upload, paste, or print from the browser, applying policies that can block sensitive transfers, notify users of violations, or silently capture incidents for audit. Yet for all its importance, monitoring browser activity hasn’t always been reliable. In this blog, we’ll discuss how browsers have long been a data security risk, and how that’s changing as of today.
Why extensions weren’t enough
The traditional way to integrate with browsers was through extensions. This approach worked, but it came with serious drawbacks:
The result was an experience that sometimes-put security teams a step behind: racing to patch breakages after browser updates, while risking temporary non-compliance or data exposure.
A new model: native browser APIs
The shortcomings of extensions led browser vendors to build purpose-built DLP APIs. These integrations create a direct line between the browser and the endpoint DLP agent, without relying on code injection or fragile extensions.
Symantec was the first DLP partner to work with Google Chrome Enterprise on this model in 2022, with Google bestowing its coveted Chrome Enterprise Recommended status on Symantec Endpoint DLP a year later. That collaboration introduced the Content Analysis Connector (CAC) in Chrome, enabling the DLP endpoint agent to inspect uploads, downloads, and other activity locally on the user’s machine. The benefits were immediate: uninterrupted coverage, same-day support for new browser versions, and expanded visibility into previously unsupported use cases.
Now, the same approach is expanding to two other major enterprise browsers.
Expanding to Edge and Firefox
With the release of Symantec DLP 25.1, native API integrations are now available for both Microsoft Edge for Business and Mozilla Firefox for Enterprise. This brings the same level of stability, visibility, and policy enforcement that enterprises have relied on with Chrome—now extended to more of the browsers their users depend on every day.
Earlier this year, Microsoft introduced security connectors in Edge for Business, naming Symantec among the first partners in preview for Data Loss Prevention. Edge for Business positions itself as a secure enterprise browser, optimized for AI, that extends existing Microsoft 365 security investments at no additional cost. Symantec’s integration plugs directly into that story, giving enterprises advanced control over sensitive data movement in a browser that’s rapidly gaining ground in regulated industries like financial services.
With Firefox 138, Mozilla has made a decisive move for the enterprise by adopting the Content Analysis SDK, the same protocol pioneered in Chrome. This upgrade gives Firefox a stable, transparent, and enterprise-ready foundation for DLP. Paired with Symantec DLP 25.1, organizations that choose Firefox for its flexibility and trusted enterprise pedigree gain consistent, reliable protection across the browser ecosystem.
What it means for security teams
Native API integrations across Chrome, Edge for Business, and Firefox deliver three things’ enterprises have been asking for:
Now more security teams can have confidence that their DLP policies will hold, regardless of how quickly browser vendors roll out new features or security updates.
Looking ahead
The phrase “enterprise browser” may have started as shorthand for Chrome Enterprise, but it’s now part of the broader lexicon and is relevant to businesses of every size. Microsoft Edge for Business uses the term as more secure browsing solutions arrive to defend against threats that target web users. Mozilla took the same step with Firefox 138 to give enterprises a stable, proven model for DLP integration. With Symantec DLP 25.1, security teams now have a unified way to extend endpoint DLP protections and policies across all major enterprise browsers.
The browser has fully grown into its role as a frontline security layer—one where native DLP integration is fast becoming the standard, not the exception. For security teams, that means less overhead, stronger coverage, and greater confidence that their most sensitive data stays where it belongs.