I have already messaged Bitwarden on the link you provided. Unfortunately they said I can just disable the login prompt from the settings as you did. I have replied but have not heard back.

Is there anyway I can explain this better to them so they understand what I am trying to say as so far I have not really been able to make it clear what the issue is. Maybe a link to the GitHub issue that is related to my issue?

This feature was built to prompt to save, on a locked vault, because especially new users would forget about unlocking their vault beforehand. Which also led to a lot of false reports found on: Bitwarden does not prompt to save or update credentials  Issue #1620  bitwarden/browser  GitHub


Chrome Disable Download Prompt


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Again, this disables it outright which is not the point of this thread. Prior to the last update in December 2021 it would not prompt to save a password if BW was locked. The title of the thread explains the issue concisely.

Notably, that same page can be used to disable notifications for a site if you previously enabled it by mistake or vice versa. Just scroll down, pick a site, and click on the three-dots options menu off to the right side of the page.

I am automating the testing process of installing a plugin in selenium right now. I am well aware you can include chrome plugins in the chromeOptions but what I want to test here is the process of manually installing the extension and how my web app reacts to it.

After clicking the "Add to Chrome" button in the web store, a prompt appears and you have to click "Add extension". I already know it is not possible to confirm this prompt using selenium, so my idea is to allow installing extensions without any prompts.According to this I can use the --prompt-for-external-extensions flag to disable those prompts.

All my attempts to add this flag to the ChromeOptions so far have failed and the prompt still appears. I am also unsure whether the precondition The constant CHROMIUM_BUILD must be defined. is fulfilled.

Is there (or can there) be a way to disable this 1Password passkey prompt for certain websites so the website can just fallback to the browser for the WebAuthN request? It's a minor annoyance but happens quite frequently throughout my work day.

I can suggest a few workarounds, you can create a second browser profile in Google Chrome, add the 1Password extension and disable the passkey feature, or you can disable the passkey prompts in your main Chrome profile.

Alternatively, if you don't want to disable the passkey feature in 1Password, after the passkey prompt appears, press the Tab key on your keyboard and then press the Space bar to select the "Use security key" icon instead of using your mouse.

The issue is that even though a single certificate is installed, chrome shows the certificate selection prompt. We have an option under IE to disable the same but I couldn't find any such option under Chrome.

Everytime I open Google Chrome on my Manjaro system, a prompt asks me to enter a password for my default keyring. I know this password as, I believe to remember, I had to enter such a password when I opened Google Chrome for the first time.

In Intune itself, you can simply create a Configuration Profile -> W10 -> Settings Catalog -> Admin Template -> Google -> Google Chrome and then set the Enable showing full-tab promotional content to disabled.

Chrome on Ubuntu always asks for password for keyring. There are many posts out there suggesting ways to remove the prompt by setting up a keyring. However, I also found that when I am prompt for a password, I can press cancel and chrome still runs normally. I feel uncomfortable to surrender my password if Chrome actually doesn't need it.

After upgrading to Chrome 108 users who run Windows 7 and Windows 8.1 started to see Windows 10 upgrade prompt right in the browser. It appears below the address bar, and on the "About Google Chrome" page.

Whose who do not plan to switch to Windows 10 or 11 may get quickly annoyed by popups in the Chrome. So Google offers a Registry option (group policy) to get rid of them. To hide upgrade prompts, do the following.

Extract the downloaded files to any folder of your choice, and open the disable OS upgrade prompt in chrome.reg file. Confirm the UAC prompt and click Yes in the Registry Editor prompt. This will instantly disable the upgrade prompts in the browser.

Edit:Discovered another setting! Right above "Password Manager" there is "Signing in with Google" which has a "Google Account sign-in prompts" setting ("Allow Google to offer a faster way to sign in with your Google Account on supported third-party sites").

I have seen other posts asking similar questions to this but they were for Ubuntu and Windows. All answers were exclusive to the respective operating system. I have not seen something that will work for Mac OS users to get the desired result: Disabling the prompt to Discard or to Keep (requiring annoying user intervention to initiate the download) so that downloads just download regardless of their extension type.

From what I have gathered from personal tests, just changing the "exited_cleanly" setting may not always work at preventing the Chromium prompt on startup. Other flags such as -disable-infobars will also not work.

Again, the file used to start up Chromium may be located in a different location, depending on how you have setup your Pi, but after changing these two settings, Chromium should start up without displaying the crashing prompt.

Every time a user clicks to open an application within StoreFront in Google Chrome our users get the prompt 'Open Citrix Workspace Launcher?' (see the attached image). That is not user friendly. It does not happen in Edge or Internet Explorer. Does anyone know how to turn it off?

Step 2. Download and install older version of Google Chrome Version 76. Go to following site which has several older versions: -chrome-old-version.php (We used the 64Bit version 76.0.3809.100)

Version 116 of Chrome OS has introduced a new prompt at login to "Change display and text size". I work in a school environment and young students are cranking the slide bar up to 150% on shared computers. This for some reason isn't profile specific and affects the login screen for the next user. I'd like to disable this with a Google Admin Console policy. The only thing I can find is to turn off display resizing in general which I would rather not disable. I just want this prompt to go away.

In the Autosave and autofill section, you can enable or disable autosave and autofill for accounts, addresses, and bank cards. If autosave and autofill are enabled, Kaspersky Password Manager automatically saves information when you fill out an online form and then fills out online forms for you.

The extension is not installed automatically with Acrobat Reader. If Acrobat Reader is the default PDF owner on your computer, you're prompted to install the extension when you launch Acrobat Reader. Once the extension is installed, you must activate it before use.

A recent update to the Chrome browser enabled the save password prompt by default, something that had not been before. After this update, whenever you visited a website and began entering credentials, a prompt to save those credentials in Chrome would appear just below the login box.

It is always good to know how to disable features like this, where private information is being stored locally for later use. If you use a public device, a device where there are several users, or if you plan to give a used device to someone, even a family member, be sure to skip using these features and/or clear all these settings out beforehand.

Most people will find the prompts listed in numbers 1-3 above helpful and they do not present many security risks - rather than help prevent them. The last two, prompting users to save their account credentials and credit card payment methods, can introduce risk when others use the computer. If you choose to use these features, be sure to read on so you know how to remove your private information at a later time if and when you need to!

Storing passwords and credit cards definitely makes our lives easier, however, the long term cost of that exposure can be high. Imagine someone else using the device and being prompted with your credentials stored in the browser to log into an account where they could then use your stored credit card.

Users can opt out of One Tap if they disable the Google Account sign-in promptsflag in the Apps with access to your account page. The opted-out sessions aren't shown in One Tap. If all Google sessions areopted out, One Tap doesn't display.

If a user disables third-party sign-in on browsers with FedCM enabled, One Tapis not displayed. In Chrome settings under the Privacy and Security sectionusers control the display of third-party sign-in prompts either globally or forindividual sites.

If the user closes the One Tap prompt manually, the One Tap prompt issuppressed. A user closes One Tap when they tap Closeclose in thetop-right corner of the prompt, after which One Tap wouldn't display in thesame browser or the last website visited for a period of time.

Due toIntelligent Tracking Prevention (ITP), thenormal One Tap UX doesn't work on Chrome on iOS, Safari, or Firefox. A differentUX is provided instead on these browsers. You have the option to disable this UXon ITP browsers by setting the data-itp_support attribute.

Most web browsers include built-in password management that prompts you to save passwords for sites that you visit. Pitt Password Manager (LastPass) is a much more secure method of storing passwords. After you install Pitt Password Manager, disable your browser's built-in password management feature to avoid confusion and enhance security. 006ab0faaa

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