evil.css
Mess with peoples' webpages. Various subtle and not-so-subtle CSS rules that will slowly drive people insane.
Inspired by Upside-Down-Ternet and kitcambridge's evil.js.
Fork it and add your own evil rules. Worthy pull requests will be accepted.
How to use it
Inject it into unsuspecting users' webpages. evil.js was intended to wreak havoc on sites hotlinking JavaScript library files, however hotlinking CSS is far less common. Some other evil ideas:
- Set it as the user stylesheet in a browser (example: discouraging "customers" at retail stores from using the computers to browse Facebook and check their email).
- Inject it into webpages or CSS files served to WiFi leachers on your open access point.
- Exploit this week's WordPress vulnerability and add it to your friend's blog.
- Hack an Internet backbone router and inject it into everyone's webpages.
A script called evil-safari-mac.sh
is included that automates setting Safari's user stylesheet to the latest version of evil.css. Run it on any Mac using Terminal.app with this easy to remember URL:
curl -L bit.ly/evil-safari-mac | sh
Uninstall it by deselecting the stylesheet in Safari's preferences, or execute this in a shell:
defaults write "com.apple.Safari" "WebKitUserStyleSheetEnabledPreferenceKey" "1"
Demo
This bookmarklet will inject the latest version of evil.css into any webpage, just copy and paste into the URL bar and hit enter:
javascript:(function(d,l){l=d.createElement("link");l.rel="stylesheet";l.href="https://rawgithub.com/tlrobinson/evil.css/master/evil.css";d.body.appendChild(l)})(document);
See Also
Credits
License
Public domain.
Obligatory disclaimer
evil.css is purely for entertainment purposes. I'm not responsible for anything you do with evil.css, nor do I suggest doing any of the above activities, especially hacking backbone routers.