Adobe Flash is probably the biggest reason for the pervasiveness of active content on the Internet. But the whole world has known for years that the Adobe Flash browser plugin is a dangerous piece of ...
Adobe has stopped developing Flash Player for Google Android and BlackBerry Tablet OS. The new Google Chrome web browser for Android doesn’t support the current version of Flash. Apple has never ...
Starting in Firefox 69, Mozilla will be disabling support for the Adobe Flash plugin by default. This is being done as part of the roadmap set forth by Mozilla on how they will be ultimately disable ...
As Adobe works to port its full Flash Player to mobile platforms and highlights its upcoming support in CS5 for building iPhone apps using Flash tools, an open source group is leading a drive to kill ...
I'm running Win 7 x64, Firefox 10.2, Flash Player 11 Plugin 64-bit 11.1.102.63. I did a manual install via Adobe's site but Firefox continues to claim the plugin has not been installed. Auto install ...
After 25 years of dominance, it's finally time for Adobe Flash Player to take a bow. A few weeks ago, Adobe gave up support for Flash Player. For security reasons, it continues to strongly recommend ...
Mozilla on Tuesday announced a massive change to the way it loads third-party plugins in Firefox. The company plans to enable Click to Play for all versions of all plugins, except the latest release ...
The Adobe Flash Player plugin that was included in yesterday's Mac OS X software update contains multiple vulnerabilities that expose users to malicious hacker attacks. Apple shipped a new Flash ...
Now here’s something unexpected. Sophos security consultant Graham Cluley has a warning for everyone who’s just upgraded their computer to run Snow Leopard: go check your Flash plugin version as soon ...
A few months ago, Google started bundling the Flash plugin with its Chrome browser. The idea was not only a matter of simplicity of use, but also one of security. That security, it seems, has just ...
It wasn’t enough for Adobe to put the kibosh on the mobile version of its Flash media plugin—a group riffing on the Occupy Wall Street movement wants to see Flash buried six feet under. Occupy Flash ...