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by danjoc 3081 days ago
Surprisingly, this is how chromium(chrome?) works. You can set it to block JS by default, then you get a <> symbol in the address bar. If you want to enable JS on a domain, right click it and enable. Now all the JS on that domain loads normally. It isn't as fine grained as NoScript, and there's not an easy way to temporarily allow. However, it's probably more normie friendly than NoScript that way.