Search Support

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

Learn More

What happened to my background color? How do I get it back?

  • 11 replies
  • 6 have this problem
  • 1 view
  • Last reply by kjvankirk

more options

Once again FF updated and I loose my background and apparently my options to modify the screen background. I switched to FF because of the ability to modify the background and now FF want to be just like Google. No choice but theirs. If anyone has an idea or a fix please help. Thanks

Once again FF updated and I loose my background and apparently my options to modify the screen background. I switched to FF because of the ability to modify the background and now FF want to be just like Google. No choice but theirs. If anyone has an idea or a fix please help. Thanks

All Replies (11)

more options

Hi

When you say "background", do you mean the theming behind the toolbar icons?

more options

No I am talking about the desktop. Allot of users like to put up their favorite site be it news or sports etc... I like a dark screen. This ability has been take away by the latest upgrade.

more options

I think we use different terminology. I think of "Desktop" as part of Windows. Within Firefox, there is the toolbar area and the content area. If you previously saw a custom page when you started up (home page) or when you opened a new tab, there are settings and add-ons to change those. It would be helpful if you could describe what has taken the place of the page you used to see.

In case the problem is the new "Activity Stream" feature that replaces the old new tab page and shows on the built-in home page:

(1) In a new tab, type or paste about:config in the address bar and press Enter/Return. Click the button promising to be careful or accepting the risk.

(2) In the search box above the list, type or paste newt and pause while the list is filtered

(3) Double-click the browser.newtabpage.activity-stream.enabled preference to switch the value from false to true to false

Does that help at all?

Modified by jscher2000 - Support Volunteer

more options

When I say desktop I am speaking of the big white page you get right after you press the home symbol on the tool bar.

I followed your instructions and the value on the line is already true. I did not change it to false.

Thank you for your help.

more options

Sorry, bad copy/paste, I meant to try false!

What is your home page? If no address shows in the address bar, you can pull that out using the Page Info dialog. Either:

  • right-click (one button mouse: Ctrl+click) a blank area of the page and choose View Page Info
  • (menu bar) Tools menu > Page Info

On the General panel, you can triple-click the URL to the right of Address to select it, then either Ctrl+c to copy it, or right-click>Copy, and you can paste it into a reply.

This hopefully will help us understand what's going on and point toward how to fix it.

more options

script-src 'unsafe-inline'; img-src http: https: data: blob:; style-src 'unsafe-inline'; child-src 'none'; object-src 'none'; report-uri https://tiles.services.mozilla.com/v4/links/activity-stream/csp

more options

Hmm, that link won't open when I click it. This is what has replaced your home page? Please go ahead and turn off Activity Stream in that case.

more options

I now have the FF logo above the search block. This is a start. If I can get the screen color dark and still retain the the search block I am in business.

Thanks

more options

Chosen Solution

more options

To change the background of the page, you can create a userContent.css file and use a custom style rule such as the following:

@-moz-document url-prefix("about:home") {
    body {
        background-color: #333 !important;
        color: #e4e4e4 !important;
    }
    #searchText, td.contentSearchSuggestionEntry {
        background-color: #e4e4e4 !important;
        color: #333 !important;
    }
    .display-container { /* Snippets */
        color: #e4e4e4 !important;
    }
    #onboarding-overlay-button-watermark-icon {
        opacity: 0.5 !important;
    }
}

A userContent.css file (must have that exact name) goes into a new chrome folder in your profile. Firefox will read it at startup.

On my website I have the steps for a userChrome.css file, which is to modify the toolbar area, but except for the different name, the process of creating the folder and file is the same: https://www.userchrome.org/how-create-userchrome-css.html

more options

Thank you all for helping me find a solution.

KJ