


After trying out the user script for a while, go back to where you installed the user script and leave some feedback for the user script's author. Once you've found a user script, click the green install button on the user script's page, and your user script manager will ask you to confirm the install.

Here is a sample of the most popular scripts: Step 2: install a user script A user script's install buttonīrowse this site to find a user script you want to try. Gear: (no additional software required).It's a shame because Tampermonkey has ~3 times the installbase of the alternative Greasemonkey and 10 times the installbase of Violentmonkey. When you install it you agree to let it access all your browsing history and activity (honestly necessary to achieve its purpose). And considering extensions get auto-updated by default, who knows what's coming next. Who knows what that extension is doing behind the scenes. The cynic in me says the github page is only there so people who google "tampermonkey source" or "tampermonkey license" are tricked into thinking it's a FOSS/privacy-friendly choice, unless they take a closer look. The most recent commit is just for a github issue template. In reality all development done in the past 10 years has been closed-source. Only that's the source from 10 years ago. The project has a Github with source licensed under GPL. I'd been using it for years to run a script that bypasses Youtube age verification without having an account. I always thought Tampermonkey was open-source, considering its popularity among hobbyists. Allowing players and Dungeon Masters to easily import content they already own - via a few clicks. People in a chat I'm in were discussing this issue and I was shocked. A script that the Tampermonkey Extension uses to modify the local session of a Roll20 game. TLDR: Tampermonkey (a browser extension that allows you to run custom scripts on any site conveniently, without writing and publishing your own extension) has been closed-source for 10 years
