I was afraid of that.

I briefly considered iframes, but the problem remained that a sneaky
webpage could still change the iframe's src attribute and mess me up.

-Min

On Jan 7, 4:30 pm, Adam Barth <[email protected]> wrote:
> This effect is difficult to achieve.  The only way I can think of to
> do it is with an iframe to a domain your control.  You can also use an
> iframe to a data URL if you don't want to involve a server.
>
> Adam
>
> On Thu, Jan 7, 2010 at 4:22 PM, Min Huang <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hello, I would like to inject content into a webpage's DOM; however, I
> > do not want said webpage to have access to any of the injected
> > content.  There is a means of doing this in Firefox via XBL and
> > anonymous content (eg the file input element is composed of a text
> > input and a button input, but the individual text and button inputs
> > are not accessible directly).
>
> > If this is not possible, I would be happy with some mechanism to
> > overlay content onto a webpage or the browser (similar to how XUL
> > panels work in Firefox).
>
> > Can anybody help?
>
> > Thanks
>
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