For Flash, the writing may finally be on the wall.
Mozilla has blocked Flash on its popular Firefox browser. A message now appears saying that Flash - the plug-in that enables animation, browser games, and other graphics online - is vulnerable, along with a message that Mozilla reserves the right to block software that "seriously compromises Firefox security."
Ouch.
The ban is temporary - it will stay in place as long as there's a version of Flash with publicly known security problems, Mozilla said. (Adobe is working on a fix.) If users really want to run Flash to view videos or use other Flash-based Web tools, they can do so - as long as they read a security warning from Mozilla first. But Mozilla is also advocating for a general end to using Flash as a Web standard.
That comes on the heels of another prominent call to bury Flash once and for all. Facebook's chief information security officer, Alex Stamos, said on Twitter that he wants Adobe to set a deadline to kill Flash once and for all, so that developers will move quickly off the old standard.