To remove flash from Safari you can just delete the plugin which is under

/Library/Internet Plug-Ins

Mine was called Flash Player.plugin

CB

Chris Hofstader wrote:
> I am largely ignorant of all but the most obvious non-VoiceOver  
> settings in Safari.  I would guess that, like IE and Firefox,, it  
> would have a "turn off Flash" in it.  A whole lot of sighted people  
> turn off Flash, especially if they have a fairly slow connection and  
> because, the majority of Flash content are stupid advertisements with  
> animation and other glitz.
>
> Can one uninstall Flash from a Mac and, if so, what happens?  With IE  
> and FF, one gets a dialogue asking if you want to install the Flash  
> plug-in or not and has a stop asking me about this box to check.
>
> It would probably be best if Safari had a way to turn Flash on and off  
> so we could enjoy that handful of accessible sites but not waste the  
> cycles on ads for a new Lexus with 0% financing.
>
> As I wrote last week, Flash, Flex and a variety of other Flash related  
> items have three major areas that keep them inaccessible for Mac users  
> in specific and screen reader users in general.  On the Mac, we have  
> the double wammy of Flash not talking to the accessibility API  
> properly (if at all) and the issues that all screen reader users face.
>
> As an odd bit of history, GW Micro was the first At company to work  
> with Adobe to make Flash accessible with a screen reader using an MSAA  
> solution.  We, at Freedom Scientific, followed suit as once Window- 
> Eyes came out with support for it our phones started ringing off of  
> the hook asking when we would have it in JAWS.  So, the customers  
> wanted Flash and we gave it to them.
>
> In the following release of Window-Eyes, one of its new features was a  
> checkbox to turn off Flash support and it was on by default.  In kind,  
> we added such a setting so our users could keep Flash from wasting  
> their time as well.
>
> To this day, years after JAWS and WE added Flash support, the vast  
> majority of Flash content authors ignore the accessibility components  
> (like labeling stuff) so, in JAWS for instance, one will often hear,  
> "Start FLash, 1, 2, 3, 4, end Flash content."  This is, of course,  
> useless but, if one has Flash turned on, it will make browsing the  
> page go much more slowly as whatever is happening in the Flash  
> segment, it is using cycles, bandwidth or both.
>
> All of this makes me quite sad as I have some pretty good friends  
> working on accessibility at Adobe and, as it comes to content, they  
> are more frustrated than most users (of which there are some on the  
> Adobe team).  I honestly believe that Adobe wants to do the right  
> thing but there are so many hurdles (large and small) on all platforms  
> that organizing a single accessibility solution with a custom layer  
> for each OS, becomes an enormous challenge.
>
> I am not paid a dime by Adobe and I never have been.  I just think  
> they have an enormous problem that is very hard to solve.
>
> Milligrams of caffeine per hour ratio is dangerously low, must get  
> more to get through my email.
>
> Enjoy,
> cdh
>
>
>   somewhere.
> On Sep 2, 2009, at 5:08 PM, Chris Blouch wrote:
>
>   
>> Flash may be inaccessible for voiceover but it is still downloading  
>> and
>> running stuff on your mac, so you might want to upgrade.
>>
>> http://www.sophos.com/blogs/gc/g/2009/09/02/apple-ships-vulnerable-version-flash-snow-leopard/
>>
>> CB
>>
>>     
>
>
> >
>   

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