![]() ![]() "Flash Player will be marked as out of date and will be blocked from loading" in Chrome come January, Google said in the Chromium roadmap. Here are how those browser makers will wrap up Flash - if they haven't already done so - late this year and early next. (Last year, Computerworld returned to the topic for a status update on the browsers' progress.) ![]() Because the vast bulk of Flash content was created for websites and run in web browsers, those four developers' plans carried enormous weight. The big browser makers - Apple, Google, Microsoft and Mozilla - piggybacked on Adobe's July 2017 announcement with their own roadmaps for the end of Player. What Adobe didn't mention was the security disaster Flash had become earlier in the century, the endless rounds of patching security vulnerabilities, often the worst "zero-day" kind, which had prompted so many content makers, former software partners and users to stiff-arm the player. ![]() Adobe argued that ending Flash was triggered by the evolution and maturation of open standards - like HTML5, WebGL and WebAssembly - that "provide many of the capabilities and functionalities that plugins pioneered" and thus were "a viable alternative for content on the web." In mid-2017, Adobe announced it would retire Flash from support and halt distribution of the application by the end of 2020. ![]()
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