What Is the Best Internet Browser to Use in 2020?

Aug 24, 2020 | Cyber Security, IT News

The fight for internet browsing supremacy has had its share of interesting developments over the past decade. But now, in 2020, which browser is currently the reigning champion?

If only it were that easy to make the claim outright. The fact is, there are several terrific options these days for a variety of reasons. We’ll list the primary top three (which most people are probably quite familiar with by now), and explain why each is now a perfectly viable option in 2020. And so, without further ado, here they are in no specific order.

Microsoft Edge (now with Chromium)

Microsoft’s revamped Edge web browser, which is based on the same Chromium code that powers Google’s Chrome browser, is finally here. You may be asking yourself, “Why use Microsoft Edge if it’s now based on the same underlying code as Chrome?” Most site developers already target Chrome as the majority market-share browser, so the switch enables Microsoft to focus on adding unique features to Edge rather than playing whack-a-mole with website incompatibilities. It’s extremely user-friendly, runs fast (it’s very well optimized), has excellent compatibility, allows extensions, and has very strong security and password configurations right out of the box.

Google Chrome

What Is the Best Internet Browser to Use in 2020?In many ways, Google’s Chrome browser is considered the “gold standard” for web browsers. Not only does it come with complete Google account integration, it also boasts some of the best mobile integration available. It has a thriving ecosystem for extensions, and its built-in adblocker even recognizes certain ads that don’t conform to accepted industry standards. On the security side, Chrome’s password manager now automatically generates and recommends strong passwords when a user creates a new account on a web page. Privacy and security settings are easy to make sense of and configure as needed.

Mozilla Firefox

Firefox is a surprisingly terrific option these days — especially with its new “Quantum” build, designed to leverage multi-core processors in ways that its competitors just aren’t doing. More recent updates also include better privacy protections with anti-tracker support, improved password syncing across devices, improved readability, integrated breach alerts and a “protections dashboard” that provides a summary of how Firefox protects your privacy behind the scenes while browsing. It has terrific compatibility, strong security, runs fast and to this day there are still websites that work better on Firefox than on other browsers. And where privacy is concerned, it has an edge over the above-mentioned browsers. This however, comes at the price of less account integration.

There are of course other browsers available besides those three. The Tor browser, for example, was made from the top down with security and privacy in mind, first and foremost. However, it sacrifices a lot of general user-friendliness for the sake of said security. Meanwhile, Opera still remains a decent browser to this day. It now utilizes Chromium, has a built-in ad blocker and VPN, and fast performance. At the time of writing, however, many websites still don’t properly recognize it.

In the end, everything is going to come down to security, usability and personal preference. No matter which browser you choose for your organization, the most important thing is that it’s configured properly. V2 Systems can go through your browser settings to make sure they’re as safe and secure as can be, while still doing what they’re intended to do: browse the internet.

Since 1995, Manassas Park, VA-based V2 Systems has employed local systems administrators, network engineers, security consultants, help desk technicians and partnering companies to meet a wide range of clients’ IT needs, from research, to implementation, to maintenance. Concentrate on your VISION…We’ll handle the TECHNOLOGY!

More From V2 Systems

Downtime Is a Cybersecurity Problem, Not Just an IT Problem

Downtime can affect payroll, customer service, compliance, productivity, revenue, and reputation. For small businesses and government contractors, outages are no longer just technical issues. This blog explains why downtime should be treated as a cybersecurity and business resilience problem, and how organizations can better prepare for disruptions.

Zero Trust Without the Buzzwords: What It Actually Looks Like in Practice

Zero Trust is often discussed as a complex cybersecurity strategy, but at its core, it is about verifying access, limiting unnecessary permissions, and reducing risk. This blog explains what Zero Trust actually looks like in practice for small businesses and government contractors — without the buzzwords, hype, or confusion.

Access Creep Is a Business Risk: How Over-Permissioned Users Create Exposure

Access creep happens when users accumulate permissions over time and keep access they no longer need. For small businesses and government contractors, this creates unnecessary cybersecurity, compliance, and operational risk. This blog explains how over-permissioned users increase exposure and what organizations can do to strengthen access controls, reduce privilege misuse, and improve audit readiness.

Why Identity-Based Attacks Dominate Cybersecurity in 2026

Identity has become the new cybersecurity perimeter. In 2026, attackers are increasingly using stolen credentials, MFA fatigue tactics, and identity misuse to gain access to business systems. This blog explains why identity-based attacks are dominating the threat landscape and what small businesses and government contractors can do to strengthen access controls, improve MFA, and reduce exposure.

The Audit Readiness Problem Government Contractors Can’t Afford to Ignore

Many government contractors are not failing audits because they lack tools. They are failing because documentation is incomplete, evidence is disorganized, and readiness starts too late. This blog explains the most common gaps and how to fix them before an audit begins.

Free
Small Business Cybersecurity Checklist

cybersecurity checklist graphic