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Amazon is full of unfamiliar brands. This Chrome extension lets you ignore them.

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Knockoff

Shopping on Amazon used to be simple. You searched for a product, compared a few familiar brands, and checked out. These days, it often feels like you’re scrolling through an endless parade of names that look like someone leaned on a keyboard before hitting publish. That’s exactly the problem Knockoff is trying to solve.

Created by developer Josh Pigford, the Chrome extension doesn’t promise to expose counterfeit products or magically tell you what’s good. Instead, it tackles something arguably more annoying: the flood of unfamiliar, mass-produced brands that dominate Amazon search results.

Goodbye, Alphabet soup

The idea is refreshingly straightforward. Knockoff identifies unfamiliar brands and gives you a choice. You can simply label them, dim them so they fade into the background, or hide them altogether. If you know and trust a particular brand, you can whitelist it. If you never want to see it again, you can block it with a click.

Knockoff is now live!

Filter out the knockoff crap brands on Amazon.

Sorry to brands like WNPETHOME, EHEYCIGA, YXYL, LU&MN, JOYIN, TOMY, GODONLIF, YOOJEE, LINGTENG, LANEIGE, VISCOO, BIODANCE, COOFANDY, BALENNZ, TOSY and LUENX.https://t.co/9mLk0EAsfG https://t.co/K07lMkepOW

— Josh Pigford (@Shpigford) July 7, 2026

The extension even lets you choose how aggressive it should be. A relaxed setting keeps intervention to a minimum, while stricter filtering hides more brands. It’s like a spam filter — but for shopping. Pigford first teased the project on X, asking whether people would actually use an extension that dims or hides what he described as “crap, mass-produced, fake brands” on Amazon. The response was enthusiastic enough that the extension is now live.

Finding the needle in Amazon’s haystack

To be clear, Knockoff isn’t accusing every unfamiliar brand of selling counterfeit products. Plenty of newer companies sell perfectly legitimate products, and some eventually grow into household names. What the extension does acknowledge is a growing frustration among online shoppers: discovering products has become exhausting. Instead of comparing a handful of recognizable options, buyers are often faced with dozens of listings from brands they’ve never encountered before, many with nearly identical product photos, titles, and descriptions. Knockoff doesn’t decide what you should buy; it simply makes the page easier to scan by reducing visual noise.

Whether that’s enough to improve the Amazon experience depends on how you shop. If you’re the kind of person who enjoys hunting for hidden gems, you may want every listing left untouched. But if you’ve ever found yourself wondering why your search results are filled with names that look randomly generated, this extension might feel like a breath of fresh air. Sometimes, making shopping better isn’t about adding another recommendation engine, it’s about knowing when to hide a few things instead.

Shimul Sood
Shimul is a contributor at Digital Trends, with over five years of experience in the tech space.
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