Crumb by Ryan Curran
Tired of clicking "Accept" or "Reject" on every site? Crumb hides cookie banners and blocks the scripts that ship them. Fully local, zero telemetry, open source under MIT. A spiritual successor to "I don't care about cookies."
Extension Metadata
About this extension
Cookie consent banners are the worst thing about the modern web. Every site, every time — the same pop-up asking you to "manage preferences" or "reject all," most of them designed to make rejecting harder than accepting.
Crumb makes them go away.
It hides cookie banners with a stylesheet built from Fanboy's Cookie Monsterlist plus a small curated overlay for sites that need extra coverage. The browser's built-in declarativeNetRequest engine blocks the consent-management scripts at the network layer.
That's the whole extension.
What makes Crumb different:
• Zero telemetry. No analytics, no crash reporting, no usage metrics. No background script. Nothing leaves your browser, ever.
• No remote calls. The block list is bundled with the extension at build time and never updates over the network. New rules ship as new versions through AMO, like every other extension you trust.
• No DOM scanning, no MutationObserver, no auto-clicking. Crumb does not press "Reject All" buttons or interact with consent dialogs. Sites that respect GDPR will treat a hidden banner as no consent given.
• Open source under MIT. Every filter and every line of code is on GitHub. The build pipeline that turns filter lists into the runtime is 100 lines of plain JavaScript — no minification, no obfuscation.
• Tiny. One content script, about 25 lines. No options page, no popup, no settings to misconfigure.
Why "Crumb"?
Because we don't give one about cookies.
Credits
Crumb is a Firefox port of the wonderful Hush by Joel Arvidsson, which works on Safari. The filter list is Fanboy's Cookie Monster by Ryan Brown, used under CC BY 3.0.
Source: https://github.com/rcurranmoz/crumb
Crumb makes them go away.
It hides cookie banners with a stylesheet built from Fanboy's Cookie Monsterlist plus a small curated overlay for sites that need extra coverage. The browser's built-in declarativeNetRequest engine blocks the consent-management scripts at the network layer.
That's the whole extension.
What makes Crumb different:
• Zero telemetry. No analytics, no crash reporting, no usage metrics. No background script. Nothing leaves your browser, ever.
• No remote calls. The block list is bundled with the extension at build time and never updates over the network. New rules ship as new versions through AMO, like every other extension you trust.
• No DOM scanning, no MutationObserver, no auto-clicking. Crumb does not press "Reject All" buttons or interact with consent dialogs. Sites that respect GDPR will treat a hidden banner as no consent given.
• Open source under MIT. Every filter and every line of code is on GitHub. The build pipeline that turns filter lists into the runtime is 100 lines of plain JavaScript — no minification, no obfuscation.
• Tiny. One content script, about 25 lines. No options page, no popup, no settings to misconfigure.
Why "Crumb"?
Because we don't give one about cookies.
Credits
Crumb is a Firefox port of the wonderful Hush by Joel Arvidsson, which works on Safari. The filter list is Fanboy's Cookie Monster by Ryan Brown, used under CC BY 3.0.
Source: https://github.com/rcurranmoz/crumb
Rated 5 by 2 reviewers
Permissions and data
Required permissions:
- Block content on any page
- Access your data for all websites
Optional permissions:
- Access your data for all websites
Data collection:
- The developer says this extension doesn't require data collection.
More information
- Add-on Links
- Version
- 0.1.1
- Size
- 327.37 KB
- Last updated
- 16 hours ago (May 8, 2026)
- Related Categories
- License
- MIT License
- Privacy Policy
- Read the privacy policy for this add-on
- Version History
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