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In my earliest days of using the Web, I used lynx. The text was light grey, and the background was black, for that was what my system defaulted to and I liked it well-enough.

Later, I used Netscape. Some of the more prominent settings[1] were for default colors: For text, links, visited links, and background. I very quickly made it white on black (but kept the blue/purple links unchanged).

But that was just me attempting to stick to my own familiarities.

For most others, the default background in those days was also not white; it was instead grey (#c0c0c0, [2], [3]).

Backgrounds defaulted to grey with Netscape all the way to the end, with Netscape Communicator 4.8 still defaulting to grey [4] at its 2002 release. Mosaic was also consistently grey [except for on the Macintosh], and so was IBM's WebExplorer (the forgotten independently-developed web browser that shipped with their forgotten desktop operating system).

Even Internet Explorer remained grey by default until the release of version 4, in the last half of 1997. [5]

But you're right, of course: There's no need for dark (or grey) mode here on HN. It's a simple-enough affair for a person of sufficient wit to change it to whatever they want, in-browser, here in 2025.

---

[1]: https://www.ou.edu/class/webstudy/n4/old/N_Link_Appearance.h...

[2]: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=20302205

[3]: https://scholar.lib.vt.edu/reports/soasis-slides/colors.html

[4]: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Netscape_Communicato...

[5]: https://gigazine.net/gsc_news/en/20110330_ie_history/



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