Google Chrome to Phase Out Flash Player Support Starting Now

Google is delivering on its promise to end flash player support. The company has released an update for its popular web browser to block all Flash content. Chrome will no longer support what was one of the most popular technologies to create visual media.

Witness the fall of the mightiest. After releasing an announcement in the first days of August, Google has made its first steps to get rid of all the flash content on their web browser. The reference in multimedia content on the web fell in disgrace after new technologies like HTLM5 emerged.

Google intends to keep their promise. The company has finally greenlighted the Chrome update (it’s now on version 55) to block all Flash content. Google’s web browser will be “lighter”, and will offer reduced load times and less energy consumption.

Adobe’s multimedia platform has proven to be a headache to maintain and has exposed millions of users to multiple security vulnerabilities over the years. Both Facebook and Firefox had many troubles with Flash in the past. From now on, Flash support will be an opt-in feature. Chrome users must manually go to the settings tab to enable the technology.

Flash was released back in 1996 when Macromedia bought FutureSplash, a software that was then rebranded as Macromedia Flash. The company was acquired in 2005 by Adobe and it quickly became one of the main tools for website design.

Related Post

Flash’s death warrant was first signed by Apple’s hesitation to incorporate Flash in their iPhones (the company said it would lower performance, battery life and security) and then with the launch of HTML5.

Companies like Facebook, who enabled HTML5 video player support last year, have made the jump from Flash player to HTML5’s native media reproduction. Youtube, the biggest video hosting website, ditched Flash for HTML5 by default in January 2015.

Google Chrome is the most popular web browser in the world, with over 1 billion active users. The software is also available for Android phones, making it a force to be reckoned with by web developers, companies, and users alike.

If you liked this article, follow us on Twitter @themerklenews and make sure to subscribe to our newsletter to receive the latest bitcoin, cryptocurrency, and technology news.

Eduardo Gómez

Eduardo Gómez is a Computer Science Major from Venezuela, a country with a loyal Bitcoin user base. He discovered Bitcoin in 2012 and now he use it to escape the triple-digit inflation that Venezuela suffers, he is focusing on developing a writing career, and he tries to keep up with the news in FinTech and Blockchain Technologies.

Share
Published by
Eduardo Gómez

Recent Posts

Velocity Ticket Debuts As The AI-Powered Invoicing Tool Every Service Business Needs in 2026

Velocity Ticket is trying to fix a major gap in businesses, and the approach it…

2 days ago

Axelar Confirms $4.67M Exploit on Secret Network Bridge, Core Protocol Remains Unaffected

Axelar is moving fast to contain damage after identifying a security incident that has resulted…

3 days ago

Sui Synthetic Dollar suiUSDe Gets Its Own Website

suiUSDe now has a dedicated landing page. The token, officially the eSui Dollar, comes out…

3 days ago

Ventuals Winds Down HIP-3 DEX, vHYPE Withdrawals Now Live For All Holders

Ventuals has fully wound down its HIP-3 DEX, and vHYPE withdrawals are now open. The…

3 days ago

Avalanche Launches Payments Collective With Franklin Templeton And 25 Others

Avalanche has launched the Avalanche Payments Collective, bringing together 28 organizations spanning nearly every layer…

4 days ago

ASTER Whale Reopens 5x Long Days After Getting Fully Liquidated On The Same Token

A wallet tracked as 0x5f91 just opened a fresh 5x leveraged long on ASTER, putting…

4 days ago