Currently, Displayr overrides some browser shortcuts (at least Ctrl-D, which bookmarks the current page in Chrome on Windows and Linux, not sure if Mac is the same). It does this silently, and a user finds out by hitting the shortcut, finding it didn’t work, and then having to possibly undo whatever they just inadvertently did in their document. In my (Jordan’s) case, I hit Ctrl-D to bookmark a dashboard, and instead duplicated an item. I had to then wait for the item to duplicate and then hit undo. I then clicked off of the page, in the browser control area, and tried again. Displayr again intercepted the event and duplicated the dashboard page this time. Excel solves this well - the first time a user hits an overridden shortcut, a popup informs the user that it was intercepted, and gives the user both an Undo button, a “Got it” for acknowledgement/dismissal, and instructions on how to remove the override if desired. !image-20220124-051519.png|width=1127,height=481!