Comments are awful. Shut Up hides them by default, sparing your sanity and preventing you from getting sucked into a world of hurt.
"Comments Section", a Chainsawsuit comic by Kris Straub
For the sites where discussions can be more constructive – like GitHub, Dropbox, or Stack Overflow – you can show comments by default.
Shut Up is an app you can install on an iPhone, iPad, or Mac, and a browser extension you can install in Chrome, Firefox, Edge or Opera. At its core is a stylesheet by Steven Frank called shutup.css. The extension injects the stylesheet's rules into almost all of the pages you visit.
When you want to see comments, it couldn't be easier:

On Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Opera, or Safari for Mac: Click the Shut Up button in your browser's toolbar.

On iPad or iPhone: Tap the aA icon, then tap "Turn off Content Blockers."
Rarely, you might find that Shut Up inadvertently blocks legitimate page content, or doesn't block comments properly. Please contact me if you think something's not working right. If you're good at web development, you can submit a pull request for shutup.css on GitHub.
Shut Up won't track nor spy on your browsing activity. The extension only periodically contacts this server for the newest copy of shutup.css, at which point some temporary diagnostic logs are recorded. On Firefox, this update check is omitted. Learn more about my privacy policies.
On iPhone or iPad, Shut Up requires iOS/iPadOS 12 or newer. You also need a 64-bit processor. Any of the following devices will work:
One more thing: You have to activate Shut Up in Settings before it may start blocking comments. To do that:
If you can't turn on Shut Up from here, you may need to first disable your device's web browsing restrictions. Once you've done that and turned on Shut Up, you can turn the restrictions back on.
news.ycombinator.com##.subline > [href^="item"]
news.ycombinator.com###me
news.ycombinator.com###karma
news.ycombinator.com###logout
news.ycombinator.com##td:nth-of-type(3) > .pagetop
news.ycombinator.com##.score
www.youtube.com###comments > .ytd-comments.style-scope
www.youtube.com###chatframe
www.youtube.com###chatNot my project, I just really like it.
I know it’s ridiculous, just seems to be the way I am.
For Safari users, don’t overlook that beautiful “Hide Distracting Items” menu which lets you block specific items elements on a per-site basis. Want to permanently hide a popover dialog? Hide it! Hide the comments section. Hide fog layers that obscure the content behind them. I use this all the time.
most tools in this space treat it as a willpower problem: block the bad thing, problem solved. but the compulsion you're describing is a signal, not a bug. the boredom and loneliness without comments suggests the underlying need is real, it's just being met in a low quality way.
i've been thinking about this a lot in the context of attention generally. the tools that actually help aren't the ones that block things, they're the ones that make you more aware of the pattern so you can consciously choose. realizing you've been reading youtube comments for 20 minutes is fundamentally different from having youtube comments blocked. one builds a skill, the other is a crutch you'll uninstall in a week.
https://www.science.org/content/article/people-would-rather-...
I did find that Adguard was pretty okay, but this looks much nicer.
The internet has and will always be about increasibg the signal te noise ratio for the user. The fact someone resorts to blacklisting entire comment section tells us something about how they view the quality of these in general; subpar.
It isn't just LLMs which contribute to that. Troll farms do, too.