Firefox Support For NPAPI Plugins Ends Next Year (mozilla.org)
An anonymous reader writes: Mozilla announced that it will follow the lead of Google Chrome and Microsoft Edge in phasing out support for NPAPI plugins. They expect to have it done by the end of next year. "Plugins are a source of performance problems, crashes, and security incidents for Web users. ... Moreover, since new Firefox platforms do not have to support an existing ecosystem of users and plugins, new platforms such as 64-bit Firefox for Windows will launch without plugin support." Of course, there's an exception: "Because Adobe Flash is still a common part of the Web experience for most users, we will continue to support Flash within Firefox as an exception to the general plugin policy. Mozilla and Adobe will continue to collaborate to bring improvements to the Flash experience on Firefox, including on stability and performance, features and security architecture." There's no exception for Java, though.
Too much use of the word 'experience' shows that Mozilla has been taken over by managers.
Of course, there's an exception: "Because Adobe Flash is still a common part of the Web experience for most users, we will continue to support Flash within Firefox as an exception to the general plugin policy. Mozilla and Adobe will continue to collaborate to bring improvements to the Flash experience on Firefox, including on stability and performance, features and security architecture."
The moral is, if you screw up in small scale you pay the price. If you screw up in gigantic scale, others will accommodate you. Small borrowers get foreclosed. Gigantic debtors get bailed out. Minor plug-ins with stability and security issues get pulled.Even major ones like java. But you screw up in gigantic scale like Adobe Flash, the market prices your misdeeds in and expects others to act knowing, "yeah, Adobe Flash is a mess, but we know it is a mess, we need to work around it".
sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
Add-ons will continue to work. This is talking about NPAPI plugins.
Plug-ins != add-ons
NPAPI is the legacy plugin system used by browsers that allows webpages to serve executable content without the user having to download a file.
This system is used by Flash, Unity, Java, and various unimportant plugins. Of these, Flash has an arrangement with Adobe, Unity has an exit strategy, and Java is completely neutered as it was for quite some time. The unimportant plugins are unimportant (and if they were, they'd have fixed it by now.)
Those are extensions, which is completely different.
NPAPI plugins are not to be confused with Firefox extensions.
The fact that they have both been found in about:addons for some time now is a source of confusion.
I want ads to be in flash because that makes them easy to block :-)
What is NPAPI ?
Jesus you're lazy: NPAPI
It must have been something you assimilated. . . .