Less rot, more attention.
Five tools that work together to put attention back where you want it. No streaks, no shaming — just better defaults for your browser.
Catch yourself, calmly.
When you land on a site you said you wanted less of, Rot Block waits a beat and then asks. The prompt is small, calm, and dismissible — but the question is the point. Most autopilot habits unwind the moment they get noticed.
The question is the point.
Twenty-five minutes of real work.
Start a focus session when you sit down to do real work. Distracting sites get held at the door for the duration, and your history shows you, week over week, what you actually finished.
Held at the door, gently.
Decide what counts today.
List a few things that count as real work. While they're unfinished, distracting sites become a checkpoint instead of a reflex — finish the list, or knowingly choose to come back later.
A reflex becomes a choice.
Your definition of a good day.
Every site you visit is labeled productive, distracting, or neutral — by default, and editable to fit your work. The labels drive every other feature, so the system always reflects your intent.
You set the rules. The browser keeps them.
The shape of your week.
Four pages: Overview for the shape of your week, Domains for the per-site breakdown, Focus for session history, and Settings for prompts, gates, and synced preferences.
No streaks. No shaming. Just signal.
Ready to block the rot?
Free, open source, syncs across devices. Takes about thirty seconds to install.