Google has detailed a proposal to make HTML5 the default in Chrome over Adobe’s Flash Player.
If all goes to plan, by the fourth quarter of 2016 Chrome will not be using the Flash plugin for the vast majority of the web, and will only make an exception as the default media player for the world’s top 10 sites that still rely on Flash.
For the time being, Flash will still be bundled with Chrome, but it will no longer automatically load Flash Player on sites that require it.
Instead, users will have to authorize each domain they wish to allow Flash to run on. That preference will be stored in Chrome, so that users don’t have to authorize it again when they visit that particular domain in future.
Google outlined the plan in a presentation called ‘HTML5 by Default’, where it notes that the list of 10 excepted sites will expire after one year.
Presumably after that Chrome will not make any exceptions, meaning users will need to make a conscious choice of selecting each and every site for which they wish to load Flash.
The plan is the latest phase in a long-running effort by Google to move the web away from Flash, which is a constant source of vulnerabilities for desktop users.
Some of the risks from Flash have been reduced by bundling Flash with Chrome, which can force users to update Flash as soon as Adobe releases a patch.
Source: ZDNet