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Firefox Mozilla

Firefox 69 Will Disable Adobe Flash Plugin by Default (zdnet.com) 112

Mozilla will take the next major step in disabling support for the Adobe Flash plugin later this year when it releases Firefox 69. From a report: Firefox 69 will be Mozilla's third last step to completely dropping support for the historically buggy plugin, which will reach end of life on December 31, 2020. Flash is the last remaining NPAPI plugin that Firefox supports. Mozilla flagged the change, spotted by Ghacks, in a new bug report that notes "we'll disable Flash by default in Nightly 69 and let that roll out". Firefox 69 stable will be released in early September, according to Mozilla's release calendar.
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Firefox 69 Will Disable Adobe Flash Plugin by Default

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  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:12PM (#57968816)
    Not exactly what the Internet would have expected.
  • Flash (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:20PM (#57968870) Homepage

    ...and nothing of value was lost.

    • Re: Flash (Score:5, Informative)

      by sound+vision ( 884283 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @08:14PM (#57969590) Journal
      It's actually not bad for making vector-based animations with interactive components. I believe that was its intended purpose. The issues came when people started using it to design entire web sites.
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        All I need to know is what https://www.waterfoxproject.or... [waterfoxproject.org]. Firefox further back in the river of time, still updated but doesn't force retentive arrogant choices on you but hey, that is what Mozzila is all about, there can be more than 'ONE', many more than one. Run them both and have SteamFox (there you go Steam start distributing your own Mozilla based browser for browser based games distributed by Steam).

  • User choice (Score:5, Interesting)

    by imidan ( 559239 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:25PM (#57968912)

    This is a good step. It's great that browser makers are generally not beholden to people like advertisers for money, so they can make more user-friendly decisions. I'd like to see more, though.

    I don't want autoplay anything in my browser. Especially audio and video. I use a plugin that aims to disable a lot of autoplay, but it doesn't always work. Why not have a browser flag that tells sites "I don't want autoplaying multimedia content"? I know crappy sites with video ads would ignore it, but more legitimate sites could respect it, potentially allowing them to save on bandwidth by not sending content to me that I don't want. I know I can stop it all by turning off JS entirely, but it's so integrated into so much of the web now that even simple sites barely work without it.

    It's a little different from "do not track" in that even legitimate sites have monetary incentive to track me regardless of how I set that flag. What incentive do they have to stream videos to me that I don't want to watch?

    Maybe I'm just in the minority in not wanting everything to be a video. Maybe the issue is that the sites have no motivation to obey "no autoplay" because it would cost developer time to satisfy a very small group of visitors.

    • This is a good step. It's great that browser makers are generally not beholden to people like advertisers for money, so they can make more user-friendly decisions.

      I don't know if I missed something there, but that is wrong.
      How is breaking my add-ons user-friendly.
      Why are there ads on the newtab page.

      • by imidan ( 559239 )

        In the case of Flash, breaking your add-on is friendly because Flash is a security menace. And, in this case, you can still enable it on a per-site basis.

        You're right about ads on the new tab page. That sucks. I don't use it for that reason.

      • by gmack ( 197796 )

        This is a good step. It's great that browser makers are generally not beholden to people like advertisers for money, so they can make more user-friendly decisions.

        I don't know if I missed something there, but that is wrong. How is breaking my add-ons user-friendly. Why are there ads on the newtab page.

        This is a good step. It's great that browser makers are generally not beholden to people like advertisers for money, so they can make more user-friendly decisions.

        I don't know if I missed something there, but that is wrong.

        /How is breaking my add-ons user-friendly.

        Mainly because flash hasn't been "run anywhere" for a very long time. If you write your page with flash, it won't run on my Raspberry PI(it never did), my flatmate's iPhone (Apple's choice) or my Android cellphone (Adobe's choice). In fact, Flash took ages to even manage 64 bit CPUs. Web pages should be write once, run anywhere but flash was a major problem in making that happen.

        Why are there ads on the newtab page.

        You can Turn those off. I did.

        • It isn't only Flash. 57 broke a lot of my add ons as well.
          Why are they there in the first place. I don't want them off. I want them to never exist in the first place
          Also, why cannot I set the new tab page to about:blank.
    • Re:User choice (Score:5, Insightful)

      by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:58PM (#57969160)

      >"Maybe I'm just in the minority in not wanting everything to be a video. [...] I don't want autoplay anything in my browser."

      You might be in the minority, but you are FAR from alone. I *detest* ANY type of media autoplay- regardless of the type or if it is muted or not. And I think most users are very annoyed by any type of autoplay, but perhaps not motivated enough to fight it (especially if muted). Firefox is the only browser (I know of) so far that allows blocking autoplay of muted video (and no addon/plugin needed):

      media.autoplay.default=1
      media.autoplay.enabled.user-gestures-needed=false
      media.autoplay.allow-muted=false

      Although it will break some sites (I find in practice it is a rare thing, though). The Firefox UI currently includes no way to set the first two of the above, you must use about:config.

      >"Maybe the issue is that the sites have no motivation to obey "no autoplay" because it would cost developer time to satisfy a very small group of visitors."

      Or they are so arrogant and controlling they want to FORCE their crap down your throat regardless of your preferences, requests, or situation. I don't want my browsing experience to ever be like DVR-less "TV" or "Radio".

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Are you perhaps also blocking Javascript by default?

        Many sites override the autoplay setting by simply having Javascript start the video.

        • >"Are you perhaps also blocking Javascript by default?"

          I am not, no. Blocking javascript breaks all sites and trying to tangle with that mess is almost impossible now.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I don't want autoplay anything in my browser. Especially audio and video. I use a plugin that aims to disable a lot of autoplay, but it doesn't always work. Why not have a browser flag that tells sites "I don't want autoplaying multimedia content"? I know crappy sites with video ads would ignore it, but more legitimate sites could respect it, potentially allowing them to save on bandwidth by not sending content to me that I don't want. I know I can stop it all by turning off JS entirely, but it's so integra

    • Disease: Flash.
      Can autoplay videos. Easy to workaround: block the plugin, even on a per-site basis.

      Remedy: HTML5 videos
      Can autoplay videos. Cannot be blocked. Some partial solutions include hidden config settings in browsers, and it may break sites.

    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      I use a plugin that aims to disable a lot of autoplay, but it doesn't always work.

      I'm interested in what your plug-in can and can't block. How many of these tests [pineight.com] still play?

      I know I can stop it all by turning off JS entirely

      CSS animated filmstrips, such as this [pineight.com] and this [pineight.com], still play with video autoplay, GIF autoplay, and JavaScript all turned off.

      • by imidan ( 559239 )
        It plays all of them except for the first three. The plugin is "Disable HTML5 Autoplay Version 0.6.2".
    • "Maybe the issue is that the sites have no motivation to obey "no autoplay" because it would cost developer time to satisfy a very small group of visitors."

      I think the issue is that adtech people are really pushing "internet tv" hard, and every autoplay video is one more they can add to the "number of times this video was played" score (regardless of whether anybody actually wanted to watch it, or what proportion of the site visitors cursed aloud and smashed the "STOP PLAYING" button as hard as they coul

    • Google generates its revenue by selling ads. Their primary reason for doing this is to cut out the competition. Not that I like autoplay garbage, but Google is an ad distributor first and foremost.
  • Where now? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    So, where do i go if i want a browser with flash support.

    Sure, disable flash by default. But as many things that involves computers, there's always people that have a use for it and/or want to access old content. I want a browser that has flash enabled. All the big vendors disabled it now. It feels they do not want to leave the choice to the user.
    Having an up-to-date browser with flash is a better option than sticking to firefox 68 with flash and without updates.

    • Re:Where now? (Score:5, Informative)

      by RickyShade ( 5419186 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @06:41PM (#57969006)

      Use oldversion.com, put an alternate browser install to run along next to your main one.

    • by Nutria ( 679911 )

      Stick with FF 56 like us sane people.

      • Firefox 56 is not sane. Firefox 52 is (Pre-Quantum), and Firefox 60 is (latest ESR release). 56 is just an oddball, and no sane person should be using it anymore at this time.
        • by Nutria ( 679911 )

          It's the last version that supports the addons I "can't" live without:
          deduplicate-tabs
          New Tab in Tab Context Menu
          Open Tabs Next to Current
          Sort Tabs

          • So are Firefox Quantum Addons suffering from the same compatibility nightmare that Firefox 2 Extensions had when they went started using the major version number as a minor version number? Or did Mozilla patch out whatever hook those Addons used to function?
    • So, where do i go if i want a browser with flash support.

      The STD clinic. Your computer is infected.

  • They have until Septemberish to recreate whatever flash was doing on their web site in javascript or python, or whatever.

    There should be plenty of job openings for contractors or new hires to replace the "functionality" Flash was "providing".

    That being said, I just remembered I had an old Tag Cloud plugin for my web site that used Flash. I should probably check and see if there's something I could replace it with.

    I'm probably either lazy about fixing stuff like this, or contented that once it's done, there

    • by Luckyo ( 1726890 ) on Tuesday January 15, 2019 @08:06PM (#57969550)

      The "excuse" is quite simple. Flash works, and implementation has been paid for. Unless you are willing to pay for new implementation, you don't get to tell people that they can't use their existing implementation "because reasons".

      It's honestly baffling how many people are so ignorant of the most basic concepts of "budgeting" and "sunk costs". No wonder so many are living paycheck to paycheck.

      • by tepples ( 727027 )

        Unless you are willing to pay for new implementation, you don't get to tell people that they can't use their existing implementation "because reasons".

        "If you continue to use Internet-facing software that is neither maintained nor formally proven correct, you are at greater risk of a data security breach and a fine or judgment against you, and no liability insurer will accept you."

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          You also show ignorance of basic IT security concepts such as "risk assessment" and "value of the target compared to costs to attack it successfully in a meaningful way".

          Concepts that insurance companies you rate so highly understand very well.

      • Flash works, and implementation has been paid for. Unless you are willing to pay for new implementation, you don't get to tell people that they can't use their existing implementation "because reasons".

        It's honestly baffling how many people are so ignorant of the most basic concepts of "budgeting" and "sunk costs". No wonder so many are living paycheck to paycheck.

        You what? Why on earth would I care about some random person's sunk costs? That's their problem not mine. The major browser vendors and mobile pl

        • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

          You appear to have misspelled "their product got dropped from the tool portfolio".

          • It would help if your posts actually made any sense. Who's product?

            If it's Firefox then yeah sure, because the iPhone doesn't support flash and neither does android. And I don't think chrome makes it easy either.

            So sure companies are free to ditch the tools that 95% of their customers use. Companies are also free you go out of business.

            What is your point?

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Any developer still using flash apparently hasn't noticed that Chrome, the most popular browser, stopped displaying it years ago. And it never worked on iOS at all.

        Flash has been dead for a long time outside of artist communities using it for animations.

  • I've thought it comical that updating Flash shuts off the "Disabling the insecure version of Adobe Flash" warning in FF, because EVERY version of Adobe Flash is insecure.

    It just takes a few weeks for someone to notice the top 10 current vulnerabilities, and turn the alarm back on.

  • You mean it hasn't been disabled already?

  • Flash is so 1990's! It's hard to believe that we're still carrying around support for a 90's-style plugin. Nobody writes Java Applets anymore. Flash Player is a similar architecture. Download the full runtime into your browser in order to run the app. Contrast that with the built-in support of newer application frameworks. I've been ready to say goodbye to Flash and its security issues for 15 years!

    • by gmack ( 197796 )

      Nobody writes Java Applets anymore.

      Well, except Brocade FCAL switch management interfaces (2 year old hardware) and most net enabled KVMs (brand new). Not even web start, requires applet in both cases

      It's far easier to for me to go without Flash since last year, I junked the only NAS device (6 years old) I had that required it.

  • So, what are we admins supposed to do without Flash? Like it or not Flash is still a necessary evil since many IT vendor's managment utilities require it for config. I wish Vmware would finally dump the flash requirement (the HTML5 version does not have full functionality) and the requirement for Windows as a vCenter host. It's about the only thing left in our environment not open source.
    And no, I do not want to switch to Chrome, I thoroughly dislike it and don't trust it.
    • by tepples ( 727027 )

      I wish Vmware would finally dump the flash requirement (the HTML5 version does not have full functionality)

      As a paying customer, you could try filing a support ticket for the missing functionality. This may, however, require you to extend your support contrast past the EOL date of Flash Player.

      • Good luck with that. Admins have been trying get vmware to support non-window tech for years. And their response to "fix missing functionality" is to use the "Full" supported client i.e.Flash.
        • by tepples ( 727027 )

          And their response to "fix missing functionality" is to use the "Full" supported client i.e.Flash.

          Which is why I specifically mentioned purchasing support that extends "past the EOL date of Flash Player", as VMware will no longer be able to call an SWF object "the 'Full' supported client" once no major web browser runs Flash Player anymore.

  • by darth_borehd ( 644166 ) on Wednesday January 16, 2019 @01:38AM (#57970662)

    How do we play or use Flash when we have to? I understand it is old, but there was a lot of content made for it. Some of it needs to still be used or enjoyed.

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