There comes a time in every hyped-up business trend’s life cycle when the noise becomes so intense it’s comical. Cryptocurrency, bitcoin, and most important, the blockchain technology that underlies them, have reached that moment. Executives in just about any industry imaginable—music, advertising, medicine, pizza delivery—are now eager to discuss how they can capitalize on “the blockchain.” (Note to execs: There are many blockchains, not just “the one.”)

To these evangelists, anything can and should go on “the blockchain.” Never mind what that actually means, or whether the relevant industry has any use for a distributed ledger. Put it on the blockchain! All of it! And so, I jokingly suggested on Twitter that someone make a browser plug-in that adds “on the blockchain” to the end of every sentence.

Friday morning, David Tran, co-founder and CTO of PR-software startup Upbeat, did just that. Tran built and published a Chrome extension called On The Blockchain in around 15 minutes. Subtitle: “Everything is better on the blockchain.”

To do so, he adapted code that was publicly available on Github, from a similar Chrome extension that changed “millennials” to “snake people,” and added a few lines of JavaScript. The millennial extension was built from yet another extension that changed the word “cloud” to “butt.” It's fitting, since before the blockchain was a buzzword, business execs loved to tout "the cloud." (A similar extension, installed by a WIRED editor, once erroneously changed mentions of Donald Trump to “Someone with small hands” on a story.)