![]() If you want a simple yet effective option to deal with site overlays and popups, PopUpOff should be at the top of the list of extensions to try. PopUpOff works really well and since it runs automated once you activate a mode on a site, is very easy to use. It removes the dreaded "consent" overlays on sites, but also sign-up prompts, email forms, and anything else that sites might display to you when you load them in your browser of choice. The extension worked fine in all of them, including on all Google properties that I tried, on Pinterest (does away with the sign-up overlay), on Reddit, on Twitter, and all other sites that I tried the extension on. I installed the extension in a Chrome test installation and went to a number of sites known to display popups and overlays. You can turn this off in the settings if you don't require the information. PopUpOff uses a counter by default to count popup and overlay instances locally. ![]() If Easy Mode is not sufficient, you may want to try Hard Mode as it will get rid of other elements on the screen, or the "I just want to read" mode that removes every overlay that the extension identifies on the page. If you reload, change to another page on the site, or restore the browsing session the next time, that mode is going to be used on that site. ![]() It also check body and html tags to "overflow: hidden" - this style blocking you from scrolling while popup opened - and resets.Ī click on a mode applies it to the site in the active tab, and it makes that mode permanent for that site. Once you activate any mode, script find all DOM current elements for position fixed/sticky/absolute(only in 1 mode) - adds to them unique attribute if they not hidden, then hides them all.
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