Minor background:  I am working on a Javascript that scans all the
headers (and special HTML comment text) in a long HTML document, and
then it generates a "document outline" or "table of contents" (TOC),
usually as a multi-level unordered list (UL) element of anchors that
jump to the headers/special target anchors, and then inserts that in a
DIV element.  Originally I was then inserting that 'div box' into the
document itself, usually as a fixed immovable element (making the DIV
scrollable) to the left of the main body of text.

Now instead I am opening a popup window and putting it there.

All my development is in "http://localhost";.  So when I opened google
to do some searching, and saw the console in FB on the page loaded in
my HTML document loaded from localhost, it was filling up with all the
errors and warnings for script and CSS typically of non-standards
compliant Google page content.

When I tried "Deactivate FB for this web site" (any google.com), the
FB insect icon was still in color (enabled), not black and white
(disabled).

When I closed the child window that had been opened, and then disabled
FB for the Google.com web site, the insect became black-and-white.  In
other words, child (popup) windows need to be closed and only one
window open so that FB knows when to enable or disable for a site.

Is this a well-known fact of FB use?  I could not find anything in a
Wiki or FAQ.  Should it qualify as a bug.

[By the way, I have a separate issue with my script related to the
child window creation, to be addressed in another thread.]

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