![]() Earlier this month we brought word of Google’s displeasure with sites attempting to spy on users browsing in Incognito Mode by exploiting a loophole within the browser. However, if you leave the setting as it is, you’ll never see the dreaded Flash content running in your Chrome browser again.īeyond dropping the axe on Flash, Google is also bringing another intriguing feature to Chrome 76. Users can still tweak it in the settings to revert back to the “Ask First” option that will enable some Flash content to run with permission. Related: How to unblock Adobe Flash Player Chrome 76 automatically blocks Flash in the browser by default. In version 76 of the Chrome browser for Mac and PC, Google has taken the individual blocking of Flash items to the next level. ![]() ![]() Somehow the format has endured like a horror movie villain, slowing down our computers and providing annoying ads for more than a decade since Jobs’ dropped the death sentence.įlash-forward (no pun intended) to July 2019 and Google’s latest efforts to rid the world of the web’s pioneering video format. Talk about a slow painful death! The Adobe Flash web video platform has been in God’s waiting room since Steve Jobs vowed the iPhone would never support it back in 2008.
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