Google Chrome The Great Suspender



This afternoon, Google has delisted the popular extension The Great Suspender for containing malware and is proactively disabling the extension for those who have it.

The Great Suspender is — or perhaps was — an extension that forced your excess tabs to sleep, helping to keep Chrome from using too much RAM and other resources. Last year, as explained in-depth by TheMageKing, the development of The Great Suspender changed hands and was subsequently sold to an unknown third party.

ManVideo

Subsequently, with version 7.1.8, The Great Suspender added an exploit that could be used to run almost any kind of code on your computer without your knowledge. This exploit led the extension to be removed from Microsoft Edge’s extensions marketplace, but The Great Suspender was allowed to stay on the Chrome Web Store as a later update reportedly removed the exploit.

Want to open more tabs and not have Google Chrome grind to a halt? Check out this video and The Great Suspender: #cloudnetworks #worksm. The Great Suspender Chrome Extension. The Great Suspender is a browser extension and it will come forth on the popular browsers, even though these browsers have claimed to boast special protections functions, such as Microsoft Edge, Google Chrome, Internet Explorer, Mozilla Firefox and even Safari.

This afternoon, Google seems to have enforced a removal of The Great Suspender for containing malware, delisting the extension from the Chrome Web Store. Further, anyone who previously had The Great Suspender installed in Chrome has had the extension forcibly disabled by Chrome.

Unfortunately, for those who were active users of The Great Suspender, this forced disabling of the extension has caused any suspended tabs to be closed and effectively lost. Luckily, the extension’s community has found a way to potentially uncover your lost tabs. Simply open chrome://history — you can also open this by pressing Ctrl-H in Chrome — and searching for The Great Suspender’s extension ID: “klbibkeccnjlkjkiokjodocebajanakg.” Each result should be a tab you had suspended, and at the end of each URL is the URL of the page you were looking for.

For example, a suspended tab may have a URL like this:

chrome-extension://klbibkeccnjlkjkiokjodocebajanakg/suspended.html
#ttl=reddit%3A%20the%20front%20page%20of%20the%20internet&pos=6807
&uri=https://www.reddit.com/

At the end, after “uri=” is the URL of your missing suspended tab. Polygon driver. In this case, your missing tab was for “https://www.reddit.com/.”

Google Chrome The Great Suspender Malware

It’s unknown if this malware issue will see The Great Suspender permanently removed from the Chrome Web Store, or if it will be restored in time. In the meantime, the community has forked the last malware-free version of The Great Suspender to create The Marvellous Suspender, which is available now on the Chrome Web Store. Download oct driver.

h/t Justin Duino, Dylan Roussel

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links.More.

The Great Suspender just got expelled.

Photometrics driver. Users of the popular tab-management extension for Chrome were greeted with an unwelcome message from Google Thursday, alerting them to the fact that their beloved add-on may have had ulterior motives. Specifically, Chrome warned that the Great Suspender 'contains malware.'

Google Chrome The Great Suspender Man

The message was accompanied by a semi-cleaving of the extension from Chrome, and a loss of all of users' suspended tabs along with it.

We reached out to Google, which owns the Chrome browser, for details on the supposed malware but received no immediate response. As of the time of this writing, attempting to pull up the Great Suspender in the Chrome Web Store leads to an error page.

However, this was not the first alert about the apparently sketchy extension. In early January, the Register, a tech news publication, reported on Great Suspender concerns dating back to November. Around that same time, Microsoft Edge blocked the extension.

That message clearly didn't get through to many of the apps' fans, though, at least some of whom are now mourning their lost tabs.

I guess I've just had a forced tab bankruptcy

— Mike Masnick (@mmasnick) February 4, 2021

Just in case you also had the Great Suspender & saw all of your suspended tabs disappear too.. 🥲 https://t.co/dSu62o78P9

Great Suspender App

— John (RusselUp) (@jwie86) February 4, 2021

Google Chrome The Great Suspender

And while losing tabs may be temporarily annoying, somehow we think they'll recover.





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