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Caius Jard
  • 74.4k
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If it bothers you, you can remove it by any variety of methods. Here's how I did it in Chrome using a scrappy bit of JS as an extension:

  • Create a folder somewhere
  • Create a manifest.json inside it
  • Create a content_script.js inside it

Set the content of manifest.json to be:

{
    "name": "Remove C# foliage",
    "version": "1.0",
    "description": "Remove C# foliage",
    "manifest_version": 2,
    "content_scripts": [
        {
            "matches": ["*://stackoverflow.com/*"],
            "js": ["/content_script.js"]
        }
    ]
}

Set the content of content_script.js to be:

var matches = document.querySelectorAll('img[src*="//i.sstatic.net/jkMwT.png"]');

matches.forEach(function(match) {
  match.parentElement.removeChild(match);
});
  • Navigate to chrome://extensions
  • Activate developer mode
  • Choose Load Unpacked and navigate to the folder where your files are

I don't know if the new extension applies to existing tabs; you may have to restart your chrome. After the document loads, all the green squares will show briefly then disappear. This targets that specific, ugly icon so if a new icon is uploaded to imgur and the site code is adjusted, it won't touch it and the new icon stays. If they change the image at the end of the same URL you'll see the image briefly then it'll disappear. Either of these events can signal you to remove this extension, which is a simple "click on its icon on the tool bar, click REMOVE"

I don't claim to be a JS pro; there may be better/more efficient ways of doing this (and I gladly accept comments on this answer for how to improve things). There may even be some sort of chrome *blocking extension that can do this already..

If it bothers you, you can remove it by any variety of methods. Here's how I did it in Chrome using a scrappy bit of JS as an extension:

  • Create a folder somewhere
  • Create a manifest.json inside it
  • Create a content_script.js inside it

Set the content of manifest.json to be:

{
    "name": "Remove C# foliage",
    "version": "1.0",
    "description": "Remove C# foliage",
    "manifest_version": 2,
    "content_scripts": [
        {
            "matches": ["*://stackoverflow.com/*"],
            "js": ["/content_script.js"]
        }
    ]
}

Set the content of content_script.js to be:

var matches = document.querySelectorAll('img[src*="//i.sstatic.net/jkMwT.png"]');

matches.forEach(function(match) {
  match.parentElement.removeChild(match);
});
  • Navigate to chrome://extensions
  • Activate developer mode
  • Choose Load Unpacked and navigate to the folder where your files are

I don't know if the new extension applies to existing tabs; you may have to restart your chrome. After the document loads, all the green squares will disappear. This targets that specific, ugly icon so if a new icon is uploaded to imgur and the site code is adjusted, it won't touch it.

I don't claim to be a JS pro; there may be better/more efficient ways of doing this (and I gladly accept comments on this answer for how to improve things). There may even be some sort of chrome *blocking extension that can do this already..

If it bothers you, you can remove it by any variety of methods. Here's how I did it in Chrome using a scrappy bit of JS as an extension:

  • Create a folder somewhere
  • Create a manifest.json inside it
  • Create a content_script.js inside it

Set the content of manifest.json to be:

{
    "name": "Remove C# foliage",
    "version": "1.0",
    "description": "Remove C# foliage",
    "manifest_version": 2,
    "content_scripts": [
        {
            "matches": ["*://stackoverflow.com/*"],
            "js": ["/content_script.js"]
        }
    ]
}

Set the content of content_script.js to be:

var matches = document.querySelectorAll('img[src*="//i.sstatic.net/jkMwT.png"]');

matches.forEach(function(match) {
  match.parentElement.removeChild(match);
});
  • Navigate to chrome://extensions
  • Activate developer mode
  • Choose Load Unpacked and navigate to the folder where your files are

I don't know if the new extension applies to existing tabs; you may have to restart your chrome. After the document loads, all the green squares will show briefly then disappear. This targets that specific, ugly icon so if a new icon is uploaded to imgur and the site code is adjusted, it won't touch it and the new icon stays. If they change the image at the end of the same URL you'll see the image briefly then it'll disappear. Either of these events can signal you to remove this extension, which is a simple "click on its icon on the tool bar, click REMOVE"

I don't claim to be a JS pro; there may be better/more efficient ways of doing this (and I gladly accept comments on this answer for how to improve things). There may even be some sort of chrome *blocking extension that can do this already..

Source Link
Caius Jard
  • 74.4k
  • 19
  • 26

If it bothers you, you can remove it by any variety of methods. Here's how I did it in Chrome using a scrappy bit of JS as an extension:

  • Create a folder somewhere
  • Create a manifest.json inside it
  • Create a content_script.js inside it

Set the content of manifest.json to be:

{
    "name": "Remove C# foliage",
    "version": "1.0",
    "description": "Remove C# foliage",
    "manifest_version": 2,
    "content_scripts": [
        {
            "matches": ["*://stackoverflow.com/*"],
            "js": ["/content_script.js"]
        }
    ]
}

Set the content of content_script.js to be:

var matches = document.querySelectorAll('img[src*="//i.sstatic.net/jkMwT.png"]');

matches.forEach(function(match) {
  match.parentElement.removeChild(match);
});
  • Navigate to chrome://extensions
  • Activate developer mode
  • Choose Load Unpacked and navigate to the folder where your files are

I don't know if the new extension applies to existing tabs; you may have to restart your chrome. After the document loads, all the green squares will disappear. This targets that specific, ugly icon so if a new icon is uploaded to imgur and the site code is adjusted, it won't touch it.

I don't claim to be a JS pro; there may be better/more efficient ways of doing this (and I gladly accept comments on this answer for how to improve things). There may even be some sort of chrome *blocking extension that can do this already..