diff --git "a/About-\"This-other-extension-reports-more-stuff-blocked!\".md" "b/About-\"This-other-extension-reports-more-stuff-blocked!\".md" index a261ec4..1d4ee7f 100644 --- "a/About-\"This-other-extension-reports-more-stuff-blocked!\".md" +++ "b/About-\"This-other-extension-reports-more-stuff-blocked!\".md" @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ The less a blocker blocks, the higher the number of network requests. The higher Ultimately, for me it's the [benchmarks I run](/gorhill/uBlock/wiki/%C2%B5Block-vs.-others:-Blocking-ads,-trackers,-malwares) to report blocking power which tells the real story. The badge is really not a good way to assess blocking power of an extension, you could well end up concluding the opposite of what is really happening. -If you don't want to run a benchmark, I have this [little online tool](http://raymondhill.net/httpsb/har-parser.html) with which you can find out the requests which were **not** prevented from leaving your browser. To use it, open the dev console for the page for which you want a report, and go to the _Network_ tab. +If you don't want to run a benchmark, I have this [little online tool](http://raymondhill.net/httpsb/har-parser.html) with which you can find out the requests which were **not** prevented from leaving your browser. To use it, open the dev console for the page for which you want a report, and go to the _Network_ tab. **Edit:** since then I have created [uBO-Scope](https://github.com/gorhill/uBO-Scope), an extension which purpose is to inform you about what was not blocked. Clear the browser cache by right-clicking somewhere in the _Network_ tab console. Force a reload of the web page, then right-click in the _Network_ tab console, and select _"Copy all as HAR"_. Then paste the result in the text area of [this online tool](http://raymondhill.net/httpsb/har-parser.html), and click _Parse_. You will be shown the hostnames which were hit by the browser for the particular page you loaded.