How to hide bookmarked sites from showing from address bar in Chrome?












15















I have bookmarked some sites with titles "Free mp3 song", "Free video" and so on.



When I am searching for "Free " in address bar, the bookmarked sites are shown first.
How can I hide the bookmarked sites from showing in address bar?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    Aside from simply renaming them?

    – Blacklight Shining
    Oct 7 '13 at 12:44











  • Arrange them in folder and they will not bother you anymore.

    – avirk
    Oct 7 '13 at 15:16






  • 2





    This just isn't possible. Google has stated it will never be an option.

    – DanteTheEgregore
    Oct 7 '13 at 20:58






  • 2





    @avirk All my bookmarks are arranged in folders. it is not a solution.

    – Eugine Joseph
    Oct 8 '13 at 5:52






  • 1





    Not a real solution but Firefox has an option to stop bookmarks from being suggested when typing in the address bar. And you can import bookmarks from firefox to chrome. Most chrome apps and extensions have a counterpart for firefox. But I don't recommend migrating to another browser for something you can ignore.

    – Subaru Tashiro
    Oct 9 '13 at 11:47
















15















I have bookmarked some sites with titles "Free mp3 song", "Free video" and so on.



When I am searching for "Free " in address bar, the bookmarked sites are shown first.
How can I hide the bookmarked sites from showing in address bar?










share|improve this question




















  • 3





    Aside from simply renaming them?

    – Blacklight Shining
    Oct 7 '13 at 12:44











  • Arrange them in folder and they will not bother you anymore.

    – avirk
    Oct 7 '13 at 15:16






  • 2





    This just isn't possible. Google has stated it will never be an option.

    – DanteTheEgregore
    Oct 7 '13 at 20:58






  • 2





    @avirk All my bookmarks are arranged in folders. it is not a solution.

    – Eugine Joseph
    Oct 8 '13 at 5:52






  • 1





    Not a real solution but Firefox has an option to stop bookmarks from being suggested when typing in the address bar. And you can import bookmarks from firefox to chrome. Most chrome apps and extensions have a counterpart for firefox. But I don't recommend migrating to another browser for something you can ignore.

    – Subaru Tashiro
    Oct 9 '13 at 11:47














15












15








15


7






I have bookmarked some sites with titles "Free mp3 song", "Free video" and so on.



When I am searching for "Free " in address bar, the bookmarked sites are shown first.
How can I hide the bookmarked sites from showing in address bar?










share|improve this question
















I have bookmarked some sites with titles "Free mp3 song", "Free video" and so on.



When I am searching for "Free " in address bar, the bookmarked sites are shown first.
How can I hide the bookmarked sites from showing in address bar?







google-chrome






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Aug 18 '13 at 11:02









Jawa

3,15982435




3,15982435










asked Aug 18 '13 at 10:28









Eugine JosephEugine Joseph

126119




126119








  • 3





    Aside from simply renaming them?

    – Blacklight Shining
    Oct 7 '13 at 12:44











  • Arrange them in folder and they will not bother you anymore.

    – avirk
    Oct 7 '13 at 15:16






  • 2





    This just isn't possible. Google has stated it will never be an option.

    – DanteTheEgregore
    Oct 7 '13 at 20:58






  • 2





    @avirk All my bookmarks are arranged in folders. it is not a solution.

    – Eugine Joseph
    Oct 8 '13 at 5:52






  • 1





    Not a real solution but Firefox has an option to stop bookmarks from being suggested when typing in the address bar. And you can import bookmarks from firefox to chrome. Most chrome apps and extensions have a counterpart for firefox. But I don't recommend migrating to another browser for something you can ignore.

    – Subaru Tashiro
    Oct 9 '13 at 11:47














  • 3





    Aside from simply renaming them?

    – Blacklight Shining
    Oct 7 '13 at 12:44











  • Arrange them in folder and they will not bother you anymore.

    – avirk
    Oct 7 '13 at 15:16






  • 2





    This just isn't possible. Google has stated it will never be an option.

    – DanteTheEgregore
    Oct 7 '13 at 20:58






  • 2





    @avirk All my bookmarks are arranged in folders. it is not a solution.

    – Eugine Joseph
    Oct 8 '13 at 5:52






  • 1





    Not a real solution but Firefox has an option to stop bookmarks from being suggested when typing in the address bar. And you can import bookmarks from firefox to chrome. Most chrome apps and extensions have a counterpart for firefox. But I don't recommend migrating to another browser for something you can ignore.

    – Subaru Tashiro
    Oct 9 '13 at 11:47








3




3





Aside from simply renaming them?

– Blacklight Shining
Oct 7 '13 at 12:44





Aside from simply renaming them?

– Blacklight Shining
Oct 7 '13 at 12:44













Arrange them in folder and they will not bother you anymore.

– avirk
Oct 7 '13 at 15:16





Arrange them in folder and they will not bother you anymore.

– avirk
Oct 7 '13 at 15:16




2




2





This just isn't possible. Google has stated it will never be an option.

– DanteTheEgregore
Oct 7 '13 at 20:58





This just isn't possible. Google has stated it will never be an option.

– DanteTheEgregore
Oct 7 '13 at 20:58




2




2





@avirk All my bookmarks are arranged in folders. it is not a solution.

– Eugine Joseph
Oct 8 '13 at 5:52





@avirk All my bookmarks are arranged in folders. it is not a solution.

– Eugine Joseph
Oct 8 '13 at 5:52




1




1





Not a real solution but Firefox has an option to stop bookmarks from being suggested when typing in the address bar. And you can import bookmarks from firefox to chrome. Most chrome apps and extensions have a counterpart for firefox. But I don't recommend migrating to another browser for something you can ignore.

– Subaru Tashiro
Oct 9 '13 at 11:47





Not a real solution but Firefox has an option to stop bookmarks from being suggested when typing in the address bar. And you can import bookmarks from firefox to chrome. Most chrome apps and extensions have a counterpart for firefox. But I don't recommend migrating to another browser for something you can ignore.

– Subaru Tashiro
Oct 9 '13 at 11:47










7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















11





+25









The Problem



The Chrome devs have stated this will never be an option.




The same as the reason we don't add options for most other things. It increases UI and code complexity, testing load, and general maintenance costs. In the case of the omnibox the whole system is designed around inline autocompletion and would require a serious rework to support an off-by-default option.



Comment 1 stands. We intend to fix problems on a case-by-case basis. We don't intend to ever provide an option to disable autocompletion.







Chrome's Omnibar has an heuristic algorithm that learns from your actions, so if you repeatedly type "h" and select the third suggestion from the browser history, it will increase its ranking. Bookmarks are supposed to be the most interesting pages from your browser history, so it's obvious that you'll find them in the list of suggestions. For now, there's no option to disable the suggestions from the browser history and your bookmarks.




I'd even hazard that Google is a bit too in love with their own product



Options



You can try replacing Chrome's Omnibar with Fauxbar. Fauxbar appears to have better control of search suggestions among other things.




Is Fauxbar for me?




  • When using Chrome's Omnibox, have you ever typed in part of a page title or address you know you've been to, yet no relevant results
    appear?

  • Do you find the Omnibox's mix of search suggestions, website suggestions, bookmarks and history items (or lack thereof) confusing?

  • Do you like having the option to click to use a search engine, instead of typing its name to use it?

  • Are you not using Chrome because you can't stand its Omnibox?


If you answered yes, then Fauxbar is for you.




Here's a look at Fauxbar's suggestion settings:



Fauxbar Settings



A note: Fauxbar doesn't actually replace Omnibar. It replaces the new tab page in Chrome and grabs the focus from the Omnibar upon opening a new tab.



Disclaimer: I'm in no way affiliated with Fauxbar. It's just a suggestion I've found on multiple sites that could work.



As it stands, I'm surprised there aren't more Omnibar replacements out there. I imagine it would be difficult to actually replace the Omnibar physically, but options such as Fauxbar do seem like a good alternative. I'd love to know if there are any further options available.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

    – user3932000
    Jan 28 '17 at 22:58



















1














Although Google seems to make this impossible, I have found a solution around the problem that works for me. I have certain bookmarks that I do not want some people like my family to see if they start typing into the address bar. So I use Xmarks (bookmarks backup and access) and Torch (web browser). I keep one account for all bookmarks including private with Xmarks so that I can access my bookmarks with password anywhere from any browser and backed-up. I keep all private bookmarks out of Chrome but store them in the Torch browser for private browsing. Torch is exactly like Chrome and compatible with all extensions with the bonus of downloading videos. As long as the family doesn't use the Torch browser, they will never see my private bookmarks.






share|improve this answer































    1














    An easy fix would be to:



    Settings



    Locate people



    Click add person



    and browse with that account when you are in the company where you do not wish to disclose personal bookmarks.



    When you open their Chrome, they will have no bookmarks that relate to your original Chrome account and you can still open the original Chrome account with all your bookmarks in place.



    I would highly recommend this to be the answer, above the original best answer this is the most efficient way of dealing with the situation without having to download software or mess around with things.






    share|improve this answer
























    • the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

      – barlop
      Sep 15 '18 at 10:02





















    0














    An even simpler solution I found if you have bookmarks that you do not want showing up when you type in the Chrome address bar/omnibox is to use the "Secure Bookmarks" extension. This allows you to transfer some or all of your bookmarks to the extension, which is passworded and easily accessible when you need them. This will stop them from showing up in the address bar.



    I resent that this took me hours to discover because Google refused to give us the option.






    share|improve this answer
























    • this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

      – barlop
      Sep 15 '18 at 6:57





















    0














    You could use Atavi Bookmarks, or just manually save a bookmarks.bak from your AppDataLocalGoogleChromeUser DataDefault folder.






    share|improve this answer

































      0














      Fauxbar lite worked for me. It is a chrome extension. The reason I was looking for this, is so that "adult bookmarks" hidden in nested menu's don't show up in the address bar, when my 9 year old borrows my laptop.






      share|improve this answer































        -3














        You can also just go to setting, then go to the bottom of the page an hit "show advanced settings". An under "privacy" you can un-check the box " Use a prediction service to help complete searches an URLs typed in the address bar or the app launcher search bar". This will prevent your book marks from coming up but only in regular chrome not in "incognito" mode. Also you may have to be more detailed in your searches to get what you need when searching.



        I hope that this helps.






        share|improve this answer
























        • wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

          – guest-vm
          Jun 22 '16 at 9:49











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        7 Answers
        7






        active

        oldest

        votes








        7 Answers
        7






        active

        oldest

        votes









        active

        oldest

        votes






        active

        oldest

        votes









        11





        +25









        The Problem



        The Chrome devs have stated this will never be an option.




        The same as the reason we don't add options for most other things. It increases UI and code complexity, testing load, and general maintenance costs. In the case of the omnibox the whole system is designed around inline autocompletion and would require a serious rework to support an off-by-default option.



        Comment 1 stands. We intend to fix problems on a case-by-case basis. We don't intend to ever provide an option to disable autocompletion.







        Chrome's Omnibar has an heuristic algorithm that learns from your actions, so if you repeatedly type "h" and select the third suggestion from the browser history, it will increase its ranking. Bookmarks are supposed to be the most interesting pages from your browser history, so it's obvious that you'll find them in the list of suggestions. For now, there's no option to disable the suggestions from the browser history and your bookmarks.




        I'd even hazard that Google is a bit too in love with their own product



        Options



        You can try replacing Chrome's Omnibar with Fauxbar. Fauxbar appears to have better control of search suggestions among other things.




        Is Fauxbar for me?




        • When using Chrome's Omnibox, have you ever typed in part of a page title or address you know you've been to, yet no relevant results
          appear?

        • Do you find the Omnibox's mix of search suggestions, website suggestions, bookmarks and history items (or lack thereof) confusing?

        • Do you like having the option to click to use a search engine, instead of typing its name to use it?

        • Are you not using Chrome because you can't stand its Omnibox?


        If you answered yes, then Fauxbar is for you.




        Here's a look at Fauxbar's suggestion settings:



        Fauxbar Settings



        A note: Fauxbar doesn't actually replace Omnibar. It replaces the new tab page in Chrome and grabs the focus from the Omnibar upon opening a new tab.



        Disclaimer: I'm in no way affiliated with Fauxbar. It's just a suggestion I've found on multiple sites that could work.



        As it stands, I'm surprised there aren't more Omnibar replacements out there. I imagine it would be difficult to actually replace the Omnibar physically, but options such as Fauxbar do seem like a good alternative. I'd love to know if there are any further options available.






        share|improve this answer



















        • 1





          The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

          – user3932000
          Jan 28 '17 at 22:58
















        11





        +25









        The Problem



        The Chrome devs have stated this will never be an option.




        The same as the reason we don't add options for most other things. It increases UI and code complexity, testing load, and general maintenance costs. In the case of the omnibox the whole system is designed around inline autocompletion and would require a serious rework to support an off-by-default option.



        Comment 1 stands. We intend to fix problems on a case-by-case basis. We don't intend to ever provide an option to disable autocompletion.







        Chrome's Omnibar has an heuristic algorithm that learns from your actions, so if you repeatedly type "h" and select the third suggestion from the browser history, it will increase its ranking. Bookmarks are supposed to be the most interesting pages from your browser history, so it's obvious that you'll find them in the list of suggestions. For now, there's no option to disable the suggestions from the browser history and your bookmarks.




        I'd even hazard that Google is a bit too in love with their own product



        Options



        You can try replacing Chrome's Omnibar with Fauxbar. Fauxbar appears to have better control of search suggestions among other things.




        Is Fauxbar for me?




        • When using Chrome's Omnibox, have you ever typed in part of a page title or address you know you've been to, yet no relevant results
          appear?

        • Do you find the Omnibox's mix of search suggestions, website suggestions, bookmarks and history items (or lack thereof) confusing?

        • Do you like having the option to click to use a search engine, instead of typing its name to use it?

        • Are you not using Chrome because you can't stand its Omnibox?


        If you answered yes, then Fauxbar is for you.




        Here's a look at Fauxbar's suggestion settings:



        Fauxbar Settings



        A note: Fauxbar doesn't actually replace Omnibar. It replaces the new tab page in Chrome and grabs the focus from the Omnibar upon opening a new tab.



        Disclaimer: I'm in no way affiliated with Fauxbar. It's just a suggestion I've found on multiple sites that could work.



        As it stands, I'm surprised there aren't more Omnibar replacements out there. I imagine it would be difficult to actually replace the Omnibar physically, but options such as Fauxbar do seem like a good alternative. I'd love to know if there are any further options available.






        share|improve this answer



















        • 1





          The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

          – user3932000
          Jan 28 '17 at 22:58














        11





        +25







        11





        +25



        11




        +25





        The Problem



        The Chrome devs have stated this will never be an option.




        The same as the reason we don't add options for most other things. It increases UI and code complexity, testing load, and general maintenance costs. In the case of the omnibox the whole system is designed around inline autocompletion and would require a serious rework to support an off-by-default option.



        Comment 1 stands. We intend to fix problems on a case-by-case basis. We don't intend to ever provide an option to disable autocompletion.







        Chrome's Omnibar has an heuristic algorithm that learns from your actions, so if you repeatedly type "h" and select the third suggestion from the browser history, it will increase its ranking. Bookmarks are supposed to be the most interesting pages from your browser history, so it's obvious that you'll find them in the list of suggestions. For now, there's no option to disable the suggestions from the browser history and your bookmarks.




        I'd even hazard that Google is a bit too in love with their own product



        Options



        You can try replacing Chrome's Omnibar with Fauxbar. Fauxbar appears to have better control of search suggestions among other things.




        Is Fauxbar for me?




        • When using Chrome's Omnibox, have you ever typed in part of a page title or address you know you've been to, yet no relevant results
          appear?

        • Do you find the Omnibox's mix of search suggestions, website suggestions, bookmarks and history items (or lack thereof) confusing?

        • Do you like having the option to click to use a search engine, instead of typing its name to use it?

        • Are you not using Chrome because you can't stand its Omnibox?


        If you answered yes, then Fauxbar is for you.




        Here's a look at Fauxbar's suggestion settings:



        Fauxbar Settings



        A note: Fauxbar doesn't actually replace Omnibar. It replaces the new tab page in Chrome and grabs the focus from the Omnibar upon opening a new tab.



        Disclaimer: I'm in no way affiliated with Fauxbar. It's just a suggestion I've found on multiple sites that could work.



        As it stands, I'm surprised there aren't more Omnibar replacements out there. I imagine it would be difficult to actually replace the Omnibar physically, but options such as Fauxbar do seem like a good alternative. I'd love to know if there are any further options available.






        share|improve this answer













        The Problem



        The Chrome devs have stated this will never be an option.




        The same as the reason we don't add options for most other things. It increases UI and code complexity, testing load, and general maintenance costs. In the case of the omnibox the whole system is designed around inline autocompletion and would require a serious rework to support an off-by-default option.



        Comment 1 stands. We intend to fix problems on a case-by-case basis. We don't intend to ever provide an option to disable autocompletion.







        Chrome's Omnibar has an heuristic algorithm that learns from your actions, so if you repeatedly type "h" and select the third suggestion from the browser history, it will increase its ranking. Bookmarks are supposed to be the most interesting pages from your browser history, so it's obvious that you'll find them in the list of suggestions. For now, there's no option to disable the suggestions from the browser history and your bookmarks.




        I'd even hazard that Google is a bit too in love with their own product



        Options



        You can try replacing Chrome's Omnibar with Fauxbar. Fauxbar appears to have better control of search suggestions among other things.




        Is Fauxbar for me?




        • When using Chrome's Omnibox, have you ever typed in part of a page title or address you know you've been to, yet no relevant results
          appear?

        • Do you find the Omnibox's mix of search suggestions, website suggestions, bookmarks and history items (or lack thereof) confusing?

        • Do you like having the option to click to use a search engine, instead of typing its name to use it?

        • Are you not using Chrome because you can't stand its Omnibox?


        If you answered yes, then Fauxbar is for you.




        Here's a look at Fauxbar's suggestion settings:



        Fauxbar Settings



        A note: Fauxbar doesn't actually replace Omnibar. It replaces the new tab page in Chrome and grabs the focus from the Omnibar upon opening a new tab.



        Disclaimer: I'm in no way affiliated with Fauxbar. It's just a suggestion I've found on multiple sites that could work.



        As it stands, I'm surprised there aren't more Omnibar replacements out there. I imagine it would be difficult to actually replace the Omnibar physically, but options such as Fauxbar do seem like a good alternative. I'd love to know if there are any further options available.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Oct 9 '13 at 13:38









        DanteTheEgregoreDanteTheEgregore

        2,12221632




        2,12221632








        • 1





          The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

          – user3932000
          Jan 28 '17 at 22:58














        • 1





          The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

          – user3932000
          Jan 28 '17 at 22:58








        1




        1





        The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

        – user3932000
        Jan 28 '17 at 22:58





        The "official" reason sounds like a bunch of nonsense. I think, like you said, they just love their perfect product so much that they want to force it onto every user, whether they like it or not.

        – user3932000
        Jan 28 '17 at 22:58













        1














        Although Google seems to make this impossible, I have found a solution around the problem that works for me. I have certain bookmarks that I do not want some people like my family to see if they start typing into the address bar. So I use Xmarks (bookmarks backup and access) and Torch (web browser). I keep one account for all bookmarks including private with Xmarks so that I can access my bookmarks with password anywhere from any browser and backed-up. I keep all private bookmarks out of Chrome but store them in the Torch browser for private browsing. Torch is exactly like Chrome and compatible with all extensions with the bonus of downloading videos. As long as the family doesn't use the Torch browser, they will never see my private bookmarks.






        share|improve this answer




























          1














          Although Google seems to make this impossible, I have found a solution around the problem that works for me. I have certain bookmarks that I do not want some people like my family to see if they start typing into the address bar. So I use Xmarks (bookmarks backup and access) and Torch (web browser). I keep one account for all bookmarks including private with Xmarks so that I can access my bookmarks with password anywhere from any browser and backed-up. I keep all private bookmarks out of Chrome but store them in the Torch browser for private browsing. Torch is exactly like Chrome and compatible with all extensions with the bonus of downloading videos. As long as the family doesn't use the Torch browser, they will never see my private bookmarks.






          share|improve this answer


























            1












            1








            1







            Although Google seems to make this impossible, I have found a solution around the problem that works for me. I have certain bookmarks that I do not want some people like my family to see if they start typing into the address bar. So I use Xmarks (bookmarks backup and access) and Torch (web browser). I keep one account for all bookmarks including private with Xmarks so that I can access my bookmarks with password anywhere from any browser and backed-up. I keep all private bookmarks out of Chrome but store them in the Torch browser for private browsing. Torch is exactly like Chrome and compatible with all extensions with the bonus of downloading videos. As long as the family doesn't use the Torch browser, they will never see my private bookmarks.






            share|improve this answer













            Although Google seems to make this impossible, I have found a solution around the problem that works for me. I have certain bookmarks that I do not want some people like my family to see if they start typing into the address bar. So I use Xmarks (bookmarks backup and access) and Torch (web browser). I keep one account for all bookmarks including private with Xmarks so that I can access my bookmarks with password anywhere from any browser and backed-up. I keep all private bookmarks out of Chrome but store them in the Torch browser for private browsing. Torch is exactly like Chrome and compatible with all extensions with the bonus of downloading videos. As long as the family doesn't use the Torch browser, they will never see my private bookmarks.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Feb 15 '14 at 23:43









            NinjarcaneNinjarcane

            111




            111























                1














                An easy fix would be to:



                Settings



                Locate people



                Click add person



                and browse with that account when you are in the company where you do not wish to disclose personal bookmarks.



                When you open their Chrome, they will have no bookmarks that relate to your original Chrome account and you can still open the original Chrome account with all your bookmarks in place.



                I would highly recommend this to be the answer, above the original best answer this is the most efficient way of dealing with the situation without having to download software or mess around with things.






                share|improve this answer
























                • the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 10:02


















                1














                An easy fix would be to:



                Settings



                Locate people



                Click add person



                and browse with that account when you are in the company where you do not wish to disclose personal bookmarks.



                When you open their Chrome, they will have no bookmarks that relate to your original Chrome account and you can still open the original Chrome account with all your bookmarks in place.



                I would highly recommend this to be the answer, above the original best answer this is the most efficient way of dealing with the situation without having to download software or mess around with things.






                share|improve this answer
























                • the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 10:02
















                1












                1








                1







                An easy fix would be to:



                Settings



                Locate people



                Click add person



                and browse with that account when you are in the company where you do not wish to disclose personal bookmarks.



                When you open their Chrome, they will have no bookmarks that relate to your original Chrome account and you can still open the original Chrome account with all your bookmarks in place.



                I would highly recommend this to be the answer, above the original best answer this is the most efficient way of dealing with the situation without having to download software or mess around with things.






                share|improve this answer













                An easy fix would be to:



                Settings



                Locate people



                Click add person



                and browse with that account when you are in the company where you do not wish to disclose personal bookmarks.



                When you open their Chrome, they will have no bookmarks that relate to your original Chrome account and you can still open the original Chrome account with all your bookmarks in place.



                I would highly recommend this to be the answer, above the original best answer this is the most efficient way of dealing with the situation without having to download software or mess around with things.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Oct 31 '16 at 17:50









                DanielDaniel

                114




                114













                • the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 10:02





















                • the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 10:02



















                the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

                – barlop
                Sep 15 '18 at 10:02







                the problem is chrome also takes suggestions based on who you are logged in as, so you can create a new user with no history, then log in from a certain email account and searches come up associated with that email account, chrome is that bad.

                – barlop
                Sep 15 '18 at 10:02













                0














                An even simpler solution I found if you have bookmarks that you do not want showing up when you type in the Chrome address bar/omnibox is to use the "Secure Bookmarks" extension. This allows you to transfer some or all of your bookmarks to the extension, which is passworded and easily accessible when you need them. This will stop them from showing up in the address bar.



                I resent that this took me hours to discover because Google refused to give us the option.






                share|improve this answer
























                • this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 6:57


















                0














                An even simpler solution I found if you have bookmarks that you do not want showing up when you type in the Chrome address bar/omnibox is to use the "Secure Bookmarks" extension. This allows you to transfer some or all of your bookmarks to the extension, which is passworded and easily accessible when you need them. This will stop them from showing up in the address bar.



                I resent that this took me hours to discover because Google refused to give us the option.






                share|improve this answer
























                • this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 6:57
















                0












                0








                0







                An even simpler solution I found if you have bookmarks that you do not want showing up when you type in the Chrome address bar/omnibox is to use the "Secure Bookmarks" extension. This allows you to transfer some or all of your bookmarks to the extension, which is passworded and easily accessible when you need them. This will stop them from showing up in the address bar.



                I resent that this took me hours to discover because Google refused to give us the option.






                share|improve this answer













                An even simpler solution I found if you have bookmarks that you do not want showing up when you type in the Chrome address bar/omnibox is to use the "Secure Bookmarks" extension. This allows you to transfer some or all of your bookmarks to the extension, which is passworded and easily accessible when you need them. This will stop them from showing up in the address bar.



                I resent that this took me hours to discover because Google refused to give us the option.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Feb 27 '14 at 13:19









                SimnosSimnos

                91




                91













                • this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 6:57





















                • this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

                  – barlop
                  Sep 15 '18 at 6:57



















                this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

                – barlop
                Sep 15 '18 at 6:57







                this doesn't seem very good, the password that extension requires has to be quite long.. it doesn't let you use a simple password like 'a' (and that's even putting aside whether the extension allows a plain text backup of bookmarks it contains)

                – barlop
                Sep 15 '18 at 6:57













                0














                You could use Atavi Bookmarks, or just manually save a bookmarks.bak from your AppDataLocalGoogleChromeUser DataDefault folder.






                share|improve this answer






























                  0














                  You could use Atavi Bookmarks, or just manually save a bookmarks.bak from your AppDataLocalGoogleChromeUser DataDefault folder.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    0












                    0








                    0







                    You could use Atavi Bookmarks, or just manually save a bookmarks.bak from your AppDataLocalGoogleChromeUser DataDefault folder.






                    share|improve this answer















                    You could use Atavi Bookmarks, or just manually save a bookmarks.bak from your AppDataLocalGoogleChromeUser DataDefault folder.







                    share|improve this answer














                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer








                    edited Nov 21 '16 at 16:14









                    3498DB

                    15.8k114762




                    15.8k114762










                    answered Nov 21 '16 at 15:32









                    user3402571user3402571

                    1




                    1























                        0














                        Fauxbar lite worked for me. It is a chrome extension. The reason I was looking for this, is so that "adult bookmarks" hidden in nested menu's don't show up in the address bar, when my 9 year old borrows my laptop.






                        share|improve this answer




























                          0














                          Fauxbar lite worked for me. It is a chrome extension. The reason I was looking for this, is so that "adult bookmarks" hidden in nested menu's don't show up in the address bar, when my 9 year old borrows my laptop.






                          share|improve this answer


























                            0












                            0








                            0







                            Fauxbar lite worked for me. It is a chrome extension. The reason I was looking for this, is so that "adult bookmarks" hidden in nested menu's don't show up in the address bar, when my 9 year old borrows my laptop.






                            share|improve this answer













                            Fauxbar lite worked for me. It is a chrome extension. The reason I was looking for this, is so that "adult bookmarks" hidden in nested menu's don't show up in the address bar, when my 9 year old borrows my laptop.







                            share|improve this answer












                            share|improve this answer



                            share|improve this answer










                            answered Jan 28 at 16:03









                            PyTisPyTis

                            112




                            112























                                -3














                                You can also just go to setting, then go to the bottom of the page an hit "show advanced settings". An under "privacy" you can un-check the box " Use a prediction service to help complete searches an URLs typed in the address bar or the app launcher search bar". This will prevent your book marks from coming up but only in regular chrome not in "incognito" mode. Also you may have to be more detailed in your searches to get what you need when searching.



                                I hope that this helps.






                                share|improve this answer
























                                • wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

                                  – guest-vm
                                  Jun 22 '16 at 9:49
















                                -3














                                You can also just go to setting, then go to the bottom of the page an hit "show advanced settings". An under "privacy" you can un-check the box " Use a prediction service to help complete searches an URLs typed in the address bar or the app launcher search bar". This will prevent your book marks from coming up but only in regular chrome not in "incognito" mode. Also you may have to be more detailed in your searches to get what you need when searching.



                                I hope that this helps.






                                share|improve this answer
























                                • wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

                                  – guest-vm
                                  Jun 22 '16 at 9:49














                                -3












                                -3








                                -3







                                You can also just go to setting, then go to the bottom of the page an hit "show advanced settings". An under "privacy" you can un-check the box " Use a prediction service to help complete searches an URLs typed in the address bar or the app launcher search bar". This will prevent your book marks from coming up but only in regular chrome not in "incognito" mode. Also you may have to be more detailed in your searches to get what you need when searching.



                                I hope that this helps.






                                share|improve this answer













                                You can also just go to setting, then go to the bottom of the page an hit "show advanced settings". An under "privacy" you can un-check the box " Use a prediction service to help complete searches an URLs typed in the address bar or the app launcher search bar". This will prevent your book marks from coming up but only in regular chrome not in "incognito" mode. Also you may have to be more detailed in your searches to get what you need when searching.



                                I hope that this helps.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Oct 8 '15 at 3:43









                                TedTed

                                1




                                1













                                • wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

                                  – guest-vm
                                  Jun 22 '16 at 9:49



















                                • wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

                                  – guest-vm
                                  Jun 22 '16 at 9:49

















                                wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

                                – guest-vm
                                Jun 22 '16 at 9:49





                                wrong. this only turns off google search suggestion. bookmarks still show up.

                                – guest-vm
                                Jun 22 '16 at 9:49


















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