Twitter Show More button Auto-Expander
This privacy policy describes how the "Twitter Show More button Auto-Expander" Chrome extension handles user information and data. We are committed to protecting your privacy and being transparent about our data practices.
This extension does not collect, store, transmit, or access any personal data whatsoever. Everything operates locally within your browser with zero data collection.
The Twitter Show More button Auto-Expander automatically clicks "Show more" buttons on Twitter/X posts to expand truncated tweets as you scroll. This enhances your reading experience by eliminating manual clicking.
All extension functionality operates entirely within your browser. The extension:
This extension requests specific permissions to function properly:
Allows the extension popup to communicate with the content script on the current Twitter/X tab. This is used only to:
Required to inject the content script that detects and clicks "Show more" buttons. Without these permissions, the extension cannot function on Twitter/X pages.
This extension does not integrate with, communicate with, or share data with any third-party services, analytics platforms, or external APIs. It operates as a completely standalone tool within your browser.
Since we don't collect any data, there are no data security concerns. All functionality is contained within your local browser environment. The extension:
We may update this privacy policy from time to time to reflect changes in our practices or for legal compliance. Any changes will be posted on this page with an updated "Last Updated" date. Continued use of the extension after changes constitutes acceptance of the updated policy.
If you have any questions about this privacy policy or the extension's data practices, please contact us:
Email: FyneHub@gmail.com
Extension Name: Twitter Show More button Auto-Expander
Platform: Chrome Web Store
Since this extension doesn't collect any personal data, traditional data rights (access, deletion, portability) don't apply. However, you always have the right to: