How do websites know they're not the default home page or search provider?
As far as I'm aware, there is no public API exposure of a browser's default homepage/search provider. So how does Google know to display this? It only comes around when Google's not the default homepage / default search provider on my browser.
I can only assume they're inferring from numerous variables, such as the referrer. I wasn't able to successfully dig down into Google's compiled JavaScript. I'm not even sure if it's detected client-side or server-side.
I'm on Firefox 44, but I've seen these banners on Chrome, too.
Solution 1:
Simply there is no way to do that with JavaScript because the "default search/homepage" is a user's preference and you do not have access to that without user's permission because that would be a security/privacy issue.
What Google does at every user visit is show a promo ad with a close icon and a go button with instructions on how to set it as the default homepage. On click of any one of them, it creates 2 cookies so that next time it will check your cookies and make the promos disappear. Even when Google is your homepage and you clear your cookies then a banner is still there to promote Google as your homepage.
I have checked this with Firefox, not aware of Chrome.
Solution 2:
I don't know what Google does, exactly, but what I would do:
- set the homepage URL with some special parameter and check it - 'http://www.example.com/#!homepage (prevents false negatives)
- check for
Referer
field:- if it's NOT there, assume user has typed it in manually
- if it's very similar for each user visit (and perhaps at what looks like the beginning of a browsing session - inferred via GA on eeevery page out there), assume user is coming here by always clicking through from somewhere
- set a cookie, e.g.
visitedHelpAboutHomePage
when the user visits the "yes, show me" page (might prevent false negatives, but might also generate false positives)
Note that the "special parameter" does happen in the "searchbox-initiated search" scenario: there is a parameter sourceid
which likely means "source of search."