I was today years old when I learned that Firefox supports custom per-domain CSS. Is this new? I thought I had tried a while ago and it only worked globally. 🤔
@-moz-document domain(movq.de)
{
div { border: 1px solid red; }
}
Either way, I love that I don’t need a plugin for that. 🥳
#zqpqvbq
(#zqpqvbq) @movq@www.uninformativ.de LOL I don’t even know roughly how old you are 🤣
#4seuufq
(#zqpqvbq) @prologic@twtxt.net Good! Germans like Datenschutz! 😂
#szom6ta
(#zqpqvbq) @movq@www.uninformativ.de Translation? 🤔🤣
#cskq7rq
(#zqpqvbq) @prologic@twtxt.net Data protection, data privacy, privacy protection, something like that. 😅
#ktytpcq
(#zqpqvbq) @movq@www.uninformativ.de Oh yea me too 🤣
#ai4w2na
(#zqpqvbq) @movq@www.uninformativ.de Interesting! I always use uBlock Origin to do that.
#2rufpfq
(#zqpqvbq) @sorenpeter@darch.dk In your profile folder (somewhere under ~/.mozilla
on Linux), there’s a chrome
folder. You can put a file called userContent.css
in there.
This also needs the setting toolkit.legacyUserProfileCustomizations.stylesheets
to be true
.
(I hope they never remove this, it’s super helpful.)
#ijneddq