I read that Chrome was dropping npapi support - In the article it said that firefox was in December. Is this true? I cannot find a source.
I read that Chrome was dropping npapi support - In the article it said that firefox was in December. Is this true? I cannot find a source.
Chosen solution
Google's announcement is here: Chromium Blog: Saying Goodbye to Our Old Friend NPAPI
I'm not aware of any time line for ending "NPAPI" plugin support in Firefox for desktop systems. However, the "click-to-play" feature, which has been modified in several recent releases, might get some further revisions...
Read this answer in context 👍 0All Replies (5)
hello, i don't think that this would be the case in firefox - where did you read that?
Chosen Solution
Google's announcement is here: Chromium Blog: Saying Goodbye to Our Old Friend NPAPI
I'm not aware of any time line for ending "NPAPI" plugin support in Firefox for desktop systems. However, the "click-to-play" feature, which has been modified in several recent releases, might get some further revisions...
http://techcrunch.com/2013/09/23/say-goodbye-to-npapi/
The article is misleading. As written it looks like it is being blocked, but it is the click to play feature they are talking about.
yes, firefox will put all plugins except the current version of flash on click-to-play on default - however users still have the choice to keep them always activated or on demand...
For more information see my post on the Future of Firefox blog: https://blog.mozilla.org/futurereleases/2013/09/24/plugin-activation-in-firefox/