Posted on 07/17/2020 6:43:51 AM PDT by Red Badger
This rusty ol internet of ours sure has a lot to offer, but man, oh man, can it be annoying to use. From ad-infested websites to autoplaying videos and an endless array of pop-up provocations, its a wonder anyone makes it through the day without going completely berserk.
It doesnt have to be that way, though. With a little fine-tuning and some carefully considered additions, surfing the web can actually becomedare I say italmost pleasant. All it takes is about 10 minutes of your time, and your desktop browser will be loaded up, tricked out, and ready to give you an exceptional online experience.
Ready to see the web in a whole new way? 1. Cookie pop-up overload
The annoyance: Recent regulations have required websites to keep you informed about their cookie-collecting habitslike, really informed. And while theres something to be said for being aware of what information a website is collecting, the constant cookie pop-ups can get to be a bit much after a while. (And honestly, how many of them are you actually clicking through and reading before mashing whatever button will get them out of your face, anyway?)
The answer: A simple browser extension called I Dont Care About Cookies does away with the webs endless cookie pop-ups once and for all. Just install the extension for Chrome, Firefox, or even Edge or Opera, and itll automatically hide any and all cookie alerts as you wade your way around the wild web. The extension itself wont collect any of your data, either, as its privacy policy makes perfectly clear. (An I Dont Care About cookies filter list lets users of Safari ad blockers hide some cookie pop-ups, but its creator says it isnt as effective as the extension.)
If you want to go a step further and proactively disable any of the associated cookies while youre at it, well, keep reading. 2. Too much tracking
The annoyance: Companies are increasingly watching your every move online and then using that information to compile shockingly detailed dockets of your behavior, activity, and interests. The process may not have any truly nefarious purpose most of the time, but its certainly enough to give anyone a mild case of the heebie-jeebies.
The answer: Youve got several viable options to make the webs cookies crumble. First, you can always use a privacy-centric browser such as Firefox, which has a customizable privacy protection system built into its core. By default, Firefox blocks cross-site and social-media-related cookies along with other forms of tracking content. You can increase or decrease what, specifically, the browser blocks to find whatever balance of privacy and function seems most suitable for you. Apples Safari also has privacy features such as Intelligent Tracking Protection built-in. Firefox has a host of options for preventing tracking and protecting your privacy.
If you prefer Chrome, you can instruct the browser to clear all cookies and site data every time you close the browser. Type chrome:settings/cookies into your address bar, and youll see the switch to enable the setting on that page.
For something a bit more robust, take a look at the Electronic Frontier Foundations Privacy Badger Chrome extension. It actively monitors which websites attempt to track you as you move around the web and first attempts to send a Do Not Track signala polite way of asking a website thats tracking to stop. If the site doesnt respect that request, the extension will ultimately force-block its tracking efforts.
The extension is open source and created by an electronic privacy advocacy group, so its own data collection is quite minimal and nonalarming. 3. The notification nuisance
The annoyance: Cookies arent the only irritating alerts lurking around the web. More and more websites seem to be taking advantage of a browser-based ability to bring you ongoing notifications about new activityand while the permission itself is easy enough to deny, the pop-ups asking for it can get pretty darn annoying when youre just trying to read an article or look for some information.
The answer: Browsers dont generally like to advertise this, but you can stop the incessant notification-asking before it even begins by disabling the system entirely. It may sound extreme, but really, how many sites do you actually want to notify you? If youre anything like me, Im guessing its somewhere between zero and one.
In Chrome:
Click the three-dot menu icon in the browsers upper-right corner, then select Settings from the menu that comes up. Click the line labeled Site Settings, under the Privacy and Security header. Click Notifications. Flip the toggle at the top of the screenthe one that says Sites can ask to send notificationsinto the off position. If you want to allow exceptions (say, for the rare site such as Twitter or Gmail where you might want to receive notifications), click the Add button within the Allow section on that same page. Thatll let you individually authorize sites to override your new no-notifications ruling and continue to send you alerts.
In Firefox:
Click the three-line menu icon in the browsers upper-right corner, then select Options from the menu that comes up. Click the Privacy & Security tab in the left-of-screen menu. Scroll down to the Permissions section and look for Notifications. Click the Settings button alongside it. Check the box next to Block new requests asking to allow notifications at the bottom of the window that comes up. Look through the list of already-approved websites in that same window and remove any that you no longer wish to be able to notify you. Firefox oddly doesnt allow you to manually add exceptions, so if you ever come across a website that you want to authorize to notify you, youll have to come back into this same settings area and temporarily uncheck the Block new requests option and then allow the site to make its request.
Apple provides instructions for preventing Safari notification requests here. 4. Autoplaying video hell
The annoyance: Few things are as irksome as opening a random web page and being treated to a video you didnt ask to see. (Insert awkward eye-darting here.) Whether the video in question is an ad or even just an associated element of a text-based story you were hoping to read, its a minorly invasive behavior and a major annoyance.
The answer: Unless youre browsing a site such as YouTube, where youre obviously opening a page to watch the video within it, you almost never want videos to autoplay as you browse the web. So turn that nonsense off altogether!
Chrome doesnt have a native setting for making that happen, but the Disable HTML5 Autoplay (Reloaded) extension is a dead-simple way to take care of it. By default, the extension will prevent any and all HTML5-oriented video from automatically playing on a page. That means even on sites such as YouTube, youll have to actively click a video to get it to start. You can create autoplay-allowing exceptions by clicking the extensions icon to the right of your address bar (or clicking the new puzzle-shaped extension icon and then clicking the extensions icon, if your browser is using the newer-style extension interface) while viewing a website.
In Firefox, you can simply look in the Privacy & Security section of the browsers settings to find the Autoplay option (beneath the Permissions header). Click the Settings button alongside it and then change the Default for all websites setting to Block Audio and Video. Youll then have to manually click any video before itll play.
Safari blocks autoplaying video by default; you can selectively allow it for some sites if you choose. 5. Cluttered content
The annoyance: Publishers these days face a tricky balance of providing a reasonably good reading experience while running enough ads to keep the lights onand lets be honest: Sometimes, the balance shifts slightly too far in the latter direction. And even if a site doesnt have an overabundance of distracting ads, its font, color, and general design choices might not create the most optimal reading experience for your discerning eyes.
The answer: A clever website called Readable lets you take total control of your web reading experience without negatively impacting publishers and all the paycheck-requiring people (cough, cough, hi there) who work for them. Unlike an ad-blocking extensionwhich prevents revenue-generating ads from displaying at all and also does nothing to help with unfortunate formatting choicesReadable works on demand, after a page has been loaded.
That means the website will get credit for showing you whatever ads it requires, and you can simply click a button in your browser to simplify the page down to a minimalist, distraction-free view with any theme, color, and text style you like, giving you more control over look and feel than with the reader modes built into some browsers. Its the best of both worlds, and everyone wins.
To get started, open the Readable website and click the Show Setup button. Youll then see a screen in which you can pick whatever font, theme, and color combinations you preferor just stick with the default optimized view. (If you want to change things up a bit but dont want to get super specific, you can also click the Style option for some premade choices such as Dark or Better Web Readability.) Readable lets you take complete control over how every web page looks with both intricate options and predefined themes.
Once you have things set to your satisfaction, simply drag the gray Readable box from the Bookmarklet section of the page up into the bookmark bar area at the top of your browserdirectly beneath the address bar. (If you dont see the bookmark bar in Chrome, press Ctrl-Shift-B to toggle it on. In Firefox, youll have to click the three-line menu icon in the browsers upper-right corner, then select Customize, click Toolbars at the bottom of the screen that comes up, and then click Bookmarks Toolbar to enable it.)
From then on out, all youll have to do is click that Readable link within your browsers bookmarks bar to transform any page youre viewing. 6. Slow-loading links
The annoyance: No matter how fast your internet connection may be, you still have to wait on a websites server to recognize your request and load all of its resources every time you open a page. And guess what? Theres a better way.
The answer: When youre looking at something on the web and preparing to click a link, you probably hover your mouse over the link for at least a secondor maybe just a fraction of one. Well, a site called Instant.Page has come up with a way to take advantage of that lull and start loading a page as soon as you hover your mouse over its link. That way, by the time you actually click, the page will have already loaded in the background and will just pop up almost instantly.
You can try it out for yourself by installing the FasterChrome extension for Chrome or Faster Pageload extension for Firefox. Just remember that the improvements are specific to links clicked from within other web pagesnot sites you open manually by typing into your browsers address bar. 7. Unwanted idle time-outs
The annoyance: From content management systems to online storefronts, lots of websites have an annoying habit of signing you out or throwing away your progress if you go a certain number of minutes without actively clicking something. Its a great way to lose valuable time and sometimes even work, simply because you stepped away for a short while or spent 15 minutes looking at another window.
The answer: Protect yourself from unnecessary idle time-outs by using an extension that automatically refreshes a page every few minutes in order to trick a site into thinking youre constantly active. The key is to open up a second instance of the site, in a separate tab, and then activate the auto-refresh extension there (so that it imitates activity without interfering with your actual active work tab).
The aptly named Super Auto Refresh Plus for Chrome or Tab Reloader for Firefox will get the job done. (Theres a reason both were included in my collection of the best work-from-home apps!) Safari has a similar extension available called Simple Refresh, though itunlike the other tools recommended hereis not free to use, requiring a $2 one-time payment. 8. Subpar security
The annoyance: Secure and encrypted website connections are now the norm, but some older or less actively maintained sites still havent gotten on the HTTPS bandwagonwhich isnt optimal, to say the least, especially if youre on a public Wi-Fi network where someone could theoretically snoop on your activity.
The answer: The Electronic Frontier Foundation has a fantastic extension called HTTPS Everywhere, available for both Chrome and Firefox. Once installed, it ensures all traffic in your web browsing adventure is properly encrypted, even if a site itself isnt taking the proper measures. 9. Impossible images
The annoyance: Images these days sure arent what they used to be. When you see an image on a website that you want to download, theres a decent chance itll be in some format you wont be able to use in any traditional waywhether its WebP, SVG, or any other manner of alphabet salad. You can right-click and save it all you want, but odds are, it wont open or display in any standard program and consequently wont do you a lick of good. And on some websites, such as Instagram, you wont even find any option to download an image when you right-click it on the page.
The answer: For the first problem of unusable image formatting, an extension called Save Image as Type for Chrome will add a handy option into your browsers right-click menu to save any image as a JPG or PNG, no matter how it appears on the page. On Firefox, this extension is the closest equivalent.
When an image cant be downloaded at all, the Imageye Chrome extension is the workaround you need. Once its installed, you can simply click its icon in your address bar to see a list of every image on the current page along with one-click links to download them directly or open them in new tabs. You can even opt to download them all in one fell swoop, if you want. (Firefox doesnt seem to have anything quite like it, unfortunately.) With Imageye in place, you can find and download any or all images from a web pagewhether it wants you to or not 10. The right-click hijack
The annoyance: Ever right-click on a website, expecting to see your standard browser menu, only to find the site has taken over that function and mapped it to its own custom list of commands? Google Docs is perhaps the best-known perpetrator of this pattern, but its far from the only place that does it. And while a custom right-click menu can serve a legitimate purpose, there are times when you want something from the standard browser setupsomething like, say, easy access to the image-saving tools we were just talking about a second ago.
Luckily, theres a hidden solution.
The answer: The next time you find yourself right-clicking and receiving a custom website menu instead of the browser standard, simply hold down the Shift key and then right-click. In Chrome, Firefox, and Safari, thatll override any custom site behavior and give you your regular right-click menu, no matter what else is going on.
Who knew?!
Ping!.......................
Tech Ping
Ping...thanks for posting!
Bookmark.
Bookmark!
bfl
I have limited BW (expensive, too!). Chrome took away (or hid deeply) the ability to stop videos from automatically playing when you go to a site. Annoying as all get out!
Thanks. Very helpful.
Thanks for posting. That Readable website does not do what the article says. Or I’m going to the wrong one. Is anybody familiar with this? American Thinker made me disable my ad blocker and now I get a massive headache every time I go there.
Very useful tips! Thanks.
Thanks! Bookmarked this one!
mark
check later
YouTube annoyances:
1. If you disable autoplay and close the browser, the next time you go back, it’s enabled again. I thought that was what cookies were supposed to do for you.
2. That popup that constantly begs you to sign up for a “free” trial of their YouTube TV pay service, and the one that asks you “how is YouTube today?”
3. “An error occurred. Please try again later”. I’m guessing your ad blocker is preventing the display of an ad, but you still have to wait for the 15 or 30 seconds for it to get to the video you want to see.
4. If you’re browsing through a long list of videos and you click on one, and then want to go back to the list, you can do that and get back to the place in the list where you were before. But if you had watched the video in full screen mode, you always end up back at the top of the list, so you have to go through the entire scrolling process again.
I have deleted Google many times from my computer, but it always comes back. It’s like a zombie..................
While I nuked my FB account some time ago, FB nevertheless continues to try & track online activity via its "partner sites." This extension helps prevent that.
Excellent article brah
They missed one: Install a profanity filter on your browser. It makes the internet much more pleasant.
Below are links to a good one. You can customize the filtered words. And you can customize replacement words. For example, it can display “Pelosi” as “Pignosey.”
Firefox:
https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/advanced_profanity_filter/
Tech bookmark.
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