I disagree about disabling it by default. The common use case for this
feature is where an URL is contained in a page text without a link (this
is frequent e.g. in blog comments). For most cases, you can simply
double-click on the URL, followed by a middle click (though it would be
a nice feature to be able to open the page in a new tab).

Without this helpful feature, you would have to manually open a new tab
and then move your mouse to the URL field and insert the text by middle-
click there. Note that you cannot use Ctrl-V to do that. It is also not
possible to easily insert the URL into the current tab's address bar,
because you would first have to empty it. Double-clicking for selecting
all text and pressing del/backspace won't help, as it overwrites the
clipboard's content.

The security concerns are IMO indeed valid (I think it even happened to
me at one time), but this can easily be fixed by allowing only valid
URLs (but allowing for a missing http://), maybe additionally disabling
the feature in close proximity to input fields.

As for the claim in comment #17 about only a minority wanting this
feature: Can you back this up? Ben Bucksch in your reference certainly
doesn't state that. And it obviously _is_ handy for the frequent
situation I described above.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/353318

Title:
  Middle mouse button invokes 'invalid URL'

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