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That’s good anyway, as it means you can tweak things to your own preferences. You’ll need to copy these CSS files locally to use them.
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Installation again would be just like the screenshots above. comments, which would block the comments area on most WordPress sites. The CSS has some specific ID’s/classes it hides for specific sites, but also some very generic ones like #comments and. Sites like YouTube and Digg are notorious for having soul-crushingly bad comments, so perhaps for the thin-skinned amongst us, you’ll have an easier time getting through the day if you just don’t see them. The idea here is to block the comment section on blogs. This is similar in spirit to the Floppy Moose CSS, but looks as if it’s been updated more recently and is far more ambitious with the domains it covers and types of elements it looks for. The best I could find for Google Chrome was the Advanced Page Injector extension, which should do the trick for applying your own CSS (or JS) or all viewed pages. Opera supports UserCSS as well, there are instructions here.
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To use it in Firefox, you put it in a special place: This is some CSS that will block a bunch of links, iframes, and miscellaneous elements based mostly on their src or href attribute, and some on class/ID. The idea is that some browsers allow you to add additional default CSS to all pages (Firefox and Safari). This is some pretty old stuff here, but hey, CSS doesn’t move that fast. Here are some CSS projects intended for blockin’ stuff. If you want to use user stylesheets, ad blockers, flash blockers, or whatever else, more power to you. I am a big proponent of you doing whatever you want to on your computer to control what is displayed to you on your screen. Besides than the fact that this site has ads on it, I generally just don’t mind it.
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