Compare Chrome extensions: Colorpeek vs Privacy Badger

Stats Colorpeek Colorpeek Privacy Badger Privacy Badger
User count 3,000+ 1,000,000+
Average rating 4.69 4.42
Rating count 35 1,711
Last updated 2022-06-04 2024-02-06
Size 109.57K 1.90M
Version 1.0.1 2024.2.6
Short description
Simply share CSS colors from text selections, images or websites using Colorpeek. Privacy Badger automatically learns to block invisible trackers.
Full summary

Colorpeek is a tiny web app for quickly seeing and sharing CSS colors. The extension can parse colors from three different sources:

  1. Text selections (hex values you received in an email, for example)
  2. Prominent colors in an image
  3. CSS colors used on a webpage

Great for designers, developers, or anyone tired of spelunking through web inspectors, opening up Photoshop or hunting and pecking with an eyedropper just to grab color values.

Additional features:

  • Customize the output of webpage palettes (hide/show black, white, grays or semi-transparent colors)
  • Change the amount of colors returned for images
  • Use from the toolbar or right-click menu

Follow https://twitter.com/colorpeek for info and updates

See more

Instead of keeping lists of what to block, Privacy Badger automatically discovers trackers based on their behavior. Privacy Badger sends the Global Privacy Control signal to opt you out of data sharing and selling, and the Do Not Track signal to tell companies not to track you. If trackers ignore your wishes, Privacy Badger will learn to block them.

Besides automatic tracker blocking, Privacy Badger replaces potentially useful trackers (video players, comments widgets, etc.) with click-to-activate placeholders, and removes outgoing link click tracking on Facebook and Google, with more privacy protections on the way. To learn more, see our FAQ at https://privacybadger.org/#faq

To get help or to report bugs, please email extension-devs@eff.org. If you have a GitHub account, you can use our GitHub issue tracker at https://github.com/EFForg/privacybadger/issues

*** Why does Privacy Badger need to read and change all my data on the websites I visit? ***

When you install Privacy Badger, your browser warns that Privacy Badger can “read and change all your data on the websites you visit”. You are right to be alarmed. You should only install extensions made by organizations you trust.

Privacy Badger requires these permissions to do its job of automatically detecting and blocking trackers on all websites you visit. We are not ironically (or unironically) spying on you. For more information, see our Privacy Badger extension permissions explainer: https://github.com/EFForg/privacybadger/blob/master/doc/permissions.md

Note that the extension permissions warnings only cover what the extension has access to, not what the extension actually does with what it has access to (such as whether the extension secretly uploads your browsing data to its servers). Privacy Badger will never share data about your browsing unless you choose to share it (by filing a broken site report). For more information, see EFF’s Privacy Policy for Software: https://www.eff.org/code/privacy/policy