How can I turn off or make sponsored conent invisible?
I understand sponsored content and tiles - I want to only see tiles that I want to see. That does *not* include sponsored content. I would rather pay for Firefox than have ads fed to my desktop - it is my favorite browser to use and develop on. How can I deactivate sponsored tiles, aside from setting up an actual URL block in GreaseMonkey or similar?
Asịsa ahọpụtara
If you want to remove the sponsored directory links on the about:newtab page then use these steps:
Set the browser.newtabpage.directory.source pref to an empty string on the about:config page.
- browser.newtabpage.directory.source = <empty>
Delete the directoryLinks.json file in the parent location of the disk cache to remove the currently stored directory links.
- delete directoryLinks.json
See the about:cache page for the location of the disk cache and go one level up.
The "AppData" folder in Windows Vista and later Window 7+ versions and the "Application Data" folder in XP/Win2K are hidden folders.
Gụọ azịza a na nghọta 👍 17All Replies (5)
hello, the new tab site provides a settings icon on the top left where you can switch back to the classical thumbnails easily: https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/tiles/
Btw, classic mode still shows sponsored content.
that should initially as long as the tiles aren't filled with your own history - you can also speed that up by simply x'ing out sponsored tiles like you could do with any other thumbnail.
The easiest way to deal with the sponsored tiles is to just change the newTab URL to something else.
Just throwing a SWAG out there, but in about:config the place I would start with is to blank out this URL from the two prefs that have this value for - https://tiles.services.mozilla.com/v2/links/ - to block what I think is the source for those sponsored tiles.
Asịsa Ahọpụtara
If you want to remove the sponsored directory links on the about:newtab page then use these steps:
Set the browser.newtabpage.directory.source pref to an empty string on the about:config page.
- browser.newtabpage.directory.source = <empty>
Delete the directoryLinks.json file in the parent location of the disk cache to remove the currently stored directory links.
- delete directoryLinks.json
See the about:cache page for the location of the disk cache and go one level up.
The "AppData" folder in Windows Vista and later Window 7+ versions and the "Application Data" folder in XP/Win2K are hidden folders.