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View Full Version : Let's all draw on the forums!



Dr. Love
01-27-2011, 10:28 PM
http://goggles.sneakygcr.net/

Drag this to your bookmark bar, then click back to this window and click the bookmark to activate it. Then vandalize the place!!

PETE'S BROTHER
01-27-2011, 10:31 PM
i'm scared

Dr. Love
01-27-2011, 10:33 PM
click the bookmark again to deactivate btw

Dr. Love
01-27-2011, 10:40 PM
also requires chrome/firefox

Blaze
01-27-2011, 10:58 PM
Browser add-ons, especially add-on toolbars, are cleverly designed to look like useful, attractive enhancements for your browser. But add-on toolbars are not the static fixture they seem to be. Quite the opposite. They are, in fact, running programs and processes. And, as such, could be quietly doing udesirable things via the internet according to whatever it is they've been programmed to do. Because of that, some toolbars may slow your system down, or destabilise it, and will almost always have some ulterior motive for wanting to get on your system, even the best known ones. Some toolbars are absolute rogues - installing themselves without the user realising it might happen, and proving a real devil to get rid of once fully entrenched on a user's hard drive.
These add-on toolbars, known formally as "third-party browser extensions", are, in fact, only one thing in an ever-growing list of internet goodies meant to make our everyday surfing lives a joy - or not. It all began, of course, with the humble, enduring 'cookie'.

PETE'S BROTHER
01-27-2011, 11:07 PM
Browser add-ons, especially add-on toolbars, are cleverly designed to look like useful, attractive enhancements for your browser. But add-on toolbars are not the static fixture they seem to be. Quite the opposite. They are, in fact, running programs and processes. And, as such, could be quietly doing udesirable things via the internet according to whatever it is they've been programmed to do. Because of that, some toolbars may slow your system down, or destabilise it, and will almost always have some ulterior motive for wanting to get on your system, even the best known ones. Some toolbars are absolute rogues - installing themselves without the user realising it might happen, and proving a real devil to get rid of once fully entrenched on a user's hard drive.
These add-on toolbars, known formally as "third-party browser extensions", are, in fact, only one thing in an ever-growing list of internet goodies meant to make our everyday surfing lives a joy - or not. It all began, of course, with the humble, enduring 'cookie'.

thank you