![]() ![]() More and more browsers are blocking Flash by default in favor of HTML5. It seems that Adobe now helps transitioning from Flash to HTML5 because it became more common and demanded and it’s powerful enough. Adobe released a successor for Flash IDE called Animate C C for developers, and Adobe officials seemed to accept the word HTML5 in their vocabulary (according to Wired). Has anything happened since that time? Yes, something important inside Adobe as well as in the media. September 23, 2015: Adobe seems to fix all the vulnerabilities. Users are instructed on how to downgrade Flash Player. July 13, 2015: iSpring releases a utility that fixes PowerPoint presentations corrupted by Flash. July 12, 2015: Alex Stamosl from Facebook asks Adobe to announce the end-of-life date for Flash. How is Flash doing now? It’s technically dead, but still alive at the same time. The modern market can’t rely on the technology that’s so unpredicted and potentially dangerous. Adobe fixed them in 2 months, meaning that you were not safe playing Farmville on Facebook during that time. It’s been more than a year after the unfortunate Flash Player update took place with its fatal security vulnerabilities.
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