Reviews for Cookie Manager
Cookie Manager by Rob W
Rated 3.6 out of 5
3.6 Stars out of 5
94 reviews
- by maajiaa, a month agoRated 5 out of 5
- by elielf c-3r, 2 months agoRated 5 out of 5
- by meisterleise, 3 months agoRated 4 out of 5Very cool! Especially if you want to explore a special page. One star less for the bad UI ;)
- by Malik Brown, 4 months agoRated 1 out of 5
- by Paolo, 5 months agoRated 5 out of 5
- by Firefox user 16250450, 5 months agoRated 4 out of 5
- by someone, 5 months agoRated 5 out of 5Use expressions like *ali*.* to get rid of all ali[express] cookies for example, as I did to fix a stupid website language bug
- by Firefox user 15659533, 6 months agoRated 1 out of 5No instructions on how to use it. Very confusing.
- by digigramer, 6 months agoRated 5 out of 5
- by narres, 6 months agoRated 5 out of 5
- by yumetodo, 6 months agoRated 4 out of 5Only one problem of this add-on is difficult to notice cookie manager page can scroll right. So, at first, I cannot find where edit button is.
- by Izi, a year agoRated 5 out of 5
- by ronaldscott, a year agoRated 5 out of 5Fantastic. Does what it says on the tin in a no-nonsense, usable way. Just what I needed.
- by Gourab Podder, a year agoRated 5 out of 5
- by thaim, a year agoRated 5 out of 5
- by Firefox user 15339165, a year agoRated 5 out of 5
- by Firefox user 14033027, a year agoRated 5 out of 5
- by Leo, 2 years agoRated 4 out of 5
- by Firefox user 15058952, 2 years agoRated 1 out of 5
- by Firefox user 15046259, 2 years agoRated 5 out of 5
- by Firefox user 12657388, 2 years agoRated 5 out of 5
- by Cyberknight, 2 years agoRated 5 out of 5The interface is a bit "shocking" the first time one sees it, like some raw data spat out of a debugger, but it is, actually, very thorough and unobtrusive, showing all the information of a cookie or the cookies of a domain. It recognises user containers (cookie jars) and, the best part for me, it is fully compatible with Waterfox (the lifesaver after the series of Mozilla's Firefox's add-ons hell, which started with the obligatory certification, then the dropping of XUL, instead of just incorporating WebExtensions, and the last one, the absolute dumbness of letting all add-ons' certificates expire on 2019/May/04).
- by Firefox user 14817686, 2 years agoRated 5 out of 5