


This kind of Flash slows down the speed of your internet connection, whereas “HTML5 is not only lighter but faster, and publishers quickly switched over to speed up page loading.

According to Google in 2018, more than 90 percent of Flash on the web loads behind the scenes to support features like page analytics. The only option instead of disabling Flash on Chrome is to grant permissions forcefully. These are ads, legacy sites, browser games, which didn’t follow the HTML5 rush when it was first introduced.Ĭhrome once included an option to disable browser plugging entirely, the latest versions of the browser removed that feature. Not to exaggerate, a substantial number of website still makes use of Adobe’s Flash. This made an overwhelming majority of the website switch to HTML5. HTML5 is much more powerful, not as complicated for developers to use, and is more security safer than Flash. Adobe’s Flash got their first major setback when HTML5 was introduced, and since then Flash’s self enjoyed monopoly dwindled.
