Why consent banners block you
Many sites drop fixed cookie banners that cover buttons, dim the page, or stop scrolling until you click. Clearing them restores immediate access while you keep browsing.
ClickRemix recipe to clear cookie banners
- Prompt: "Hide any fixed or sticky elements with 'cookie', 'consent', 'gdpr', or 'privacy' in the class or id; remove backdrops and blur."
-
Add: "Reset
overflowonhtml, bodyto auto so scrolling works; re-enable pointer events on main content." - Ask: "Keep headers and nav bars visible; avoid moving page content once the banner is gone."
- Save as "No Cookie Wall" to reuse everywhere.
Common selectors
-
Hide
[id*="cookie"],[class*="consent"],[class*="gdpr"], and[role="dialog"]if it covers the viewport. -
Remove backdrops like
.backdropor.modal-overlaythat dim the page. -
Force scroll with
html, body { overflow: auto !important; }.
If forms keep popping back
Some banners re-inject after a click. Ask ClickRemix to "continuously hide new elements matching cookie/consent selectors" so the preset keeps the page clear as you browse.
Keep forms and nav usable
When removing a banner, ensure form fields in headers (like search) stay clickable. Ask ClickRemix to "preserve header z-index and pointer events on nav links" so you can still type and click menus without overlays intercepting input.
If the page hides behind consent
Some sites block content until a consent flag is set. Add "hide overlay,
but keep page scrollable; do not blur main content" and, if needed, ask
ClickRemix to set body opacity to 1 so text and images stay
visible after the overlay disappears.
Make it stick across sessions
If banners reappear on every page, ask ClickRemix to apply the preset on load and re-run when new nodes mount. Pair it with your browser's built-in cookie controls so you keep a consistent, banner-free experience across sites.