Hide
The cookie wall, the Shorts shelf, the engagement bait. Point at it once. It never renders again.
Point at anything on any website and teach it how to behave: hide it, auto-click it, or remember your setting. No code, no scripts. Your rules re-apply on every visit and survive the site redesigning itself. Everything stays on your device.
Add to Chrome pending Chrome Web Store reviewThe cookie wall, the Shorts shelf, the engagement bait. Point at it once. It never renders again.
"Reject all." "Not now." "Skip." Buttons you press every single visit, pressed for you the instant they appear.
Sort by newest. Dark mode on. The dropdown you reset every time, held at your setting. Permanently.
On your device. Nowhere else. Rules are stored in local extension storage. No accounts, no cloud, no sync servers. On sites you haven't taught, Veto reads its own settings, finds nothing to do, and goes idle: no page data is read, modified, or transmitted.
One number is counted: when a rule is created, an anonymous event records the rule type. Never the site, never the element. It exists so we know whether to keep building, and it has a visible off switch in the popup.