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SumGuy

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Posts posted by SumGuy

  1. Sorry for the confusion, it was bedtime when I posted that.

    I meant that the previously mentioned anomalous Edge/Google Chrome extension cookie leftovers seem to be resolved in CCleaner v6.23. I can confirm that other cookies are in fact still detected and cleaned normally. Even though many show a file size of 0 KB, so we still really can't be sure what's actually being cleaned, or what may be "empty containers". Maybe it would be a good idea to have the option to view results in bytes?

    First analysis:
    01.thumb.png.7e01ff17c18c0cec2e31802748ec4de7.png

    Google Chrome Cookies:
    02.thumb.png.fd49e261fb29aef18859af862b6d9b58.png

    Analysis AFTER Cleaning:
    03.thumb.png.ae0ab72147322feb4870b44e16237caa.png

  2. 10 hours ago, nukecad said:

    As per lmacri;s post above, they are the browsers own built in 'extensions', not the same thing as the user added extensions/add-ons.

    I suspect that they are 'containers', always there and empty unless something is put into them, I don't use Edge Chromium at all but still see them for Edge.

    The cleaning has been updated in 6.22, but are your cleaning settings exactly the same when using 6.21 portable?
    ie. Has the installed 6.22 had the Chrome cleaning modified from the defaults (which portable would use).

    It seems the opposite is true for my extensions. The leftovers are for the ones I added myself. None of the Google/Edge built-in extensions show up at all. There's also one for my AV and a couple of Google branded extensions I added that don't show in the leftovers either.

    It's the same extensions that I've installed in both Google Chrome and Edge:
    PayPal Honey, uBlock Origin, YouTube Auto HD, WebRTC Control (NOT the built-in WebRTC plugins), Scroll Anywhere, and Behind The Overlay.

    EDIT: One of the leftovers for Edge is "Cookie: s://devtool" (not listed as an extension), and I don't have PayPal Honey installed for Edge. The rest are the same as Google Chrome.
     

    As for the leftover Internet Cache files, yes I manually matched the settings. I deleted them with CCleaner v6.21, and there haven't been any more anomalies since, so I hope it was just a one-off.

  3. @nukecad 

    You're right, the entries are for extensions, but they aren't detected in previous CCleaner versions, so it's natural to be curious of their reoccurring presence after an update.

    Those Cookie file sizes are 0 KB before AND after being cleaned, even after running hundreds of browser tabs. Plenty of other 0 KB files also appear in the "cleaned" list that don't reappear, so we really can't tell if anything's actually being cleaned at all - containers or not...

    Another curious thing is that after cleaning with CCleaner v6.22, and then immediately running the portable CCleaner v6.21, I have 85 Chrome Internet Cache files that remain in the analysis that don't show in v6.22.

    Seems off to me.

    CleanedofNot.thumb.png.234c4f3eb9f6f6f3958e3d0a5225b503.png

  4. I have the same issue. After running Custom Clean, I have six Cookie files "cleaned" for Chrome and six for Edge. All twelve files are 0 KB. Re-analyzing immediately afterward shows those same twelve files still exist.

    CleaningComplete.png.b37a274c3e9933792bb868697a29a894.png 
    AnalysisComplete.png.e510123336ef8fcfab6ca3c196c4e6a8.png SecondCleaning.png.4b988750a84728ff53715e42b819fa20.png

    It happens without the browsers running in the background. I already had both Chrome and Edge set to not continue running in the background after closing. I also ran Custom Clean while intentionally leaving the browsers open to see if I still get the pop-up warning asking "Do you want CCleaner to close Chrome/Edge?", and the "Do not show me this message again" box is still unchecked. So that's not the cause for me.

  5. Chrome 95 now has a baked-in feature called "copy link to highlight". It's been available for a while through one of Chrome's experimental flags, but it's currently enabled by default. No extension necessary:
    https://support.google.com/chrome/answer/10256233

    I'm glad I read through this thread though, because I've been having trouble with a different extension becoming non-functional after running custom clean -
    WebRTC Control Extension

    I would have to disable/re-enable it in the Chrome extensions page and also turn it OFF/ON with the extension icon next to the URL bar before it would respond. If I exclude the folder "C:\Users\[UserName]\AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\User Data\Default\Service Worker\", it works fine. There are two sub folders in that directory, but I haven't been able to narrow it down to any specific files. I have to exclude everything in the "Service Worker" location for some reason.

  6. If you prefer to use Gmail or other Google sites without signing in to the Chrome browser itself, then there's an option to do so. If you stay signed into Chrome, then you're probably outta luck.

    Chrome Settings > Advanced > Privacy and security > Allow Chrome sign-in (By turning this off, you can sign in to Google sites like Gmail without signing in to Chrome.)

    Hope that helps. I never sign in to Chrome or sync anything, and I always run CCleaner after browsing/checking Gmail.

  7. I don't get the prompt to install Avast because I have an internet security suite that has the options to:
       - "Automatically clear check boxes to install additional software & warn of attempts to install additional progs"
       - "Don't show installation steps that may contain adverts & offers for additional apps"

    Is it possible you have something similar that didn't fully work with the newest version of the CCleaner installer?

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