• AcesFullOfKings@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    SponsorBlock. An absolute necessity if you watch youtube on desktop. It skips host-read sponsors in videos, as well as other stuff you might want to skip like intro animations and Interaction Reminders (“don’t forget to like and subscribe!”).

    • NightOwl@lemmy.one
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      11 months ago

      I love skip to highlight, and I hate interaction reminders more than sponsored ads or ads. I especially hate the ones that tell you to like and subscribe at the very beginning when you haven’t even seen the video to even decide if this is something you actually want to add to your feed or even liked.

      It’s so obnoxious. Without sponsorblock I’d be just exiting out a lot of videos.

      Block tube is also something I’ve come to love, since there’s some popular channels that always clutter search results even if you don’t watch their videos. So removing them makes results more relevant instead of having to keep looking down the list for other channel videos.

    • Ⓑⓡⓞⓚⓔⓝ@lemdro.id
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      11 months ago

      There’s also DeArrow by the same developer that made SponsorBlock. It converts clickbait titles and thumbnails to be descriptive rather than being clickbaity and sensational.

          • AcesFullOfKings@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Begs? Bad take. It’s the developer’s full time job to make those two extensions. They don’t materialise out of thin air, someone has to dedicate themself to developing it, hosting the servers which store and send the information, managing the community around them, fixing bugs. That stuff isn’t free. The servers alone cost hundreds of dollars per month. If you value the utility that it gives you then paying a small amount for the server cost and the developer’s time is completely fair.

            edit: oh and also dearrow is usable entirely for free. The payment is basically optional.

    • stebo02@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      “don’t forget to like and subscribe!”

      what’s the issue with that?

      • penguin@sh.itjust.works
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        11 months ago

        They’re normally not that short and I hate being asked to do the same thing a thousand times.

        Don’t forget to like and subscribe, and click that bell icon to get notified of all our latest videos. Also, let us know what you think about ABC down in the comments! And if you want more content like this, click join to become a member and please become a Patreon member. This week we’re giving special mention to John, who supports us at the top level. And this video is brought to you by Square Space!"

  • Crul@lemm.ee
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    11 months ago

    Usability

    • Kill Sticky: Kill off the annoying floating things blocking the website you’re trying to see.
    • Tranquility Reader: Like native “reader view” but compatible with other addons and more options.
    • Scroll Zoom: Zoom web pages with the left or right mouse button and the scroll wheel.

    Image / Video

    • Image Max URL: Finds larger/original versions of images (supporting 8800+ websites), including a powerful image popup feature
    • Invert Image: The add-on inverts color of an image or color of any part of a page. Changes white color to black, for comfortable night time reading.
    • Save webP as PNG or JPEG: Convert any image (WebP, AVIF, etc.) to PNG or JPEG (with choice of quality) for downloading.
    • TinEye Reverse Image Search: Click on any image on the web to search for it on TinEye.
    • Video Speed Controller: Speed up, slow down, advance and rewind any HTML5 video with quick shortcuts.
    • Enhancer for YouTube™: Take control of YouTube and boost your user experience!

    Tools

    • EPUBReader: Read ePub files right in Firefox. No additional software needed!
    • WebStickies: (Persistent) Sticky notes for the Internet

    RSS

    • RSSHub Radar: RSSHub Radar is a spin-off of RSSHub that helps you quickly discover and subscribe to RSS and RSSHub for your current site.
    • RSSPreview: Preview RSS feeds in-browser

    Customization

    • Stylus: Redesign your favorite websites with Stylus, an actively developed and community driven userstyles manager.
    • Tampermonkey: Tampermonkey is the world’s most popular userscript manager.

    Advanced

    • Request Control: An extension for controlling requests. See also Redirector, not as powerful, but much more user friendly.
    • Modify Header Value (HTTP Headers): Add, modify or remove a header for any request on desired domains. I use this one to force sites to load only the image when opening images in new tabs.
    • Cookie AutoDelete: Control your cookies! This WebExtension is inspired by Self Destructing Cookies. When a tab closes, any cookies not being used are automatically deleted. Keep the ones you trust (forever/until restart) while deleting the rest. Containers Supported
    • uBlock Origin: Finally, an efficient wide-spectrum content blocker. Easy on CPU and memory.
    • uMatrix: [EDIT-WARNING: as pointed by @sovietknuckles@hexbear.net, uMatrix it’s not longer maintained since 2021] Point & click to forbid/allow any class of requests made by your browser. Use it to block scripts, iframes, ads, facebook, etc.
      • Crul@lemm.ee
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        11 months ago

        I cannot answer that properly, I don’t really understand them enough. I will add some copy-pasted answer on bottom. But, from a user perspective my experience is:

        • uBlock origin: blocks a lot of (but not all) unwanted stuff without breaking (almost) anything. When some page does not work, tt’s very uncommon that uBlock origin is the cause.
        • uMatrix: blocks (almost) all unwanted stuff, but it breaks many pages by default. If a page does not work, the first thing I look at is uMatrix.
        • NoScript (and similar): It’s been some time since I used it (so those who are more familiar, please correct me if I’m wrong). What I remember is that it was even more strict than uMatrix. Something like uMatrix allows by default everything from the same domain as the URL but NoScript does not.

        So I would recommend uBlock origin always and uMatrix only if you are ok with some micro-management page-by-page.

        Here it’s a copy-paste of the answer from the first link in the google search ublock umatrix differences:

        Chris’s Wiki :: blog/web/UBlockOriginAndUMatrix

        While it’s true that uMatrix and uBlock Origin have overlapping functionality (and are written by the same person), they have different purposes and focuses. uBlock Origin’s focus is blocking ads and other undesired things as an out of the box experience with little configuration needed. uMatrix’s focus is on exerting tight and highly specific control over what resources a page is allowed to load and use, including Javascript and cookies (and requires a lot of configuration).

          • Crul@lemm.ee
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            11 months ago

            Oh, I had forgotten, I’m going to add a warning to my comment thanks for noticing!

            When I was aware of that, I expected it to break at some point. But I didn’t find a proper replacement… and it still seems to be working fine.

  • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    Besides the one super-obvious (uBlockOrigin), my favorite single one would be Tab Center Reborn, which together with the styling from Firefox Vertical Tabs pretty accurate recreates the superb vertical tabs of MS Edge.

    And on a desktop screen, I can’t imagine going back to horizontal tabs that waste the previous vertical space I got.

      • Carighan Maconar@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        Tried that, I thought it was cumbersome and a solution desperately looking for a problem, tbh. I never once in my life had the thought that my tabs need to be in a multi-tier structure. I’m not someone to collect thousands of tabs though.

        I should also add that your second part makes no sense: Chrome doesn’t have the vertical tabs Edge has and that this setup recreates.

        • Nighed@sffa.community
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          11 months ago

          I find it great as it groups your thought processes. You Google something and it opens a group for that, then you read something in one of the search result tabs and need to go to some links there/Google more stuff - that’s now grouped under it so you can easily find things for that thought track. Once you are done, you can close all the tabs in one go.

          As far as I’m aware you can’t nest groups in edge? I’m trying now and can’t even reliably create a group and it scrolls randomly when trying to move tabs around.

          That final part is my point - as far as I’m aware the other browsers have nothing as powerful as this. May need to check if there is anything new though.

          • Ⓑⓡⓞⓚⓔⓝ@lemdro.id
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            11 months ago

            it groups your thought processes

            TreeStyleTabs is awesome at this. The customisations on this are also deep.

            I think Opera launched a similar features called ‘Tab Islands’, I’ve not tried it yet, though it seems they are not as powerful as this extension.

  • SootyChimney [any]@hexbear.net
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    11 months ago

    ublock obviously should be installed on Firefox by default. But I seem to have a host of privacy add-ons that break few-to-no websites.

    • Privacy Possum , which blocks certain tracking headers/js. Privacy Badger by the EFF is an acceptable alternative but I’ve personally found it doesn’t block quite as much.
    • NoScript Honestly my favourite addon of all time. You can operate in block-everything mode and just allow javascript/HTML5 from sites you trust, or if you’re lazy then just operate in allow-everything mode and every now and then set crummy sites to untrusted (looking at you google tag manager). In block-everything-by-default mode, this add-on will break some sites, but the UI is so easy it’s a couple of clicks to trust all the sites in a tab and auto-refresh.

    Be warned - If you’re not privacy conscious, you might cry from seeing the hundreds of sites that are running javascript on your machine without asking.

    • User-Agent Switcher Really easy add-on to just leave on and misdirect sites. Never caused me a single problem, and in fact is useful when sites (looking at you Microsoft Teams) claim they don’t work in Firefox and refuse to load but actually work fine if you use this addon and pretend to be Chrome.
    • Sponsorblock kicks ass. 30 hours of ads skipped in half a year.

    And my personal silly couple ones:

    • Wikipedia Vector Skin because I’m an old fuddy duddy and I like old Wikipedia.
    • Cat-In-Tab because I’m also an old fuddy-duddy that likes whimsy sometimes. This is just silly but I like it.
    • Rudee@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      I needed User-Agent Switcher a few days ago. But I’m glad I have it now!

  • SGG@lemmy.world
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    11 months ago

    These are the ones I cannot live without/use everyday:

    I have a few others installed that have already been mentioned plenty of times like SponsorBlock, uBlockOrigin. Not using an ad filter these days is like fucking a stranger without a condom, you’re just asking for super syphilis.

    • Phuntis@sopuli.xyz
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      11 months ago

      firefox has native container support now you shouldn’t be using container extensions anymore

      • SGG@lemmy.world
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        11 months ago

        I honestly didn’t even notice that! Disabled the extension and tested things out, it looks like there’s no automatic “open this website in container X” option without using the extension. If I’m wrong I must have missed it. That’s another main part of my workflow, basically have sharepoint sites for the various 365 accounts (one for the company I work for, others for clients), that way it always uses the correct account for each instance as an example.

    • Fazoo@lemmy.ml
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      11 months ago

      There’s the Multi-Container mention. Best native extension you could ever use. Can’t recommend it enough, alongside many other mentions.

  • jetsetdorito@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    clickbait remover for YouTube… it replaces thumbnails with an actual frame from the video

  • Fazoo@lemmy.ml
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    11 months ago

    I don’t think I’ve seen this mentioned, likely because it’s a simple, non-privacy extension.

    Reading List. It works like bookmarks, but it is targeted at news articles and other things you want to read but don’t necessarily want to “forever save”.

  • magoosh@feddit.nl
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    10 months ago

    I really like consent-o-matic on firefox. You can set your cookie level to (dis)allow, and it goes through them automatically when you land on a site.

    There is “i dont care about cookies”, but I do care, I dont want your cookies and I dont want to go through your dark patterns!