Chromium is not in "main", i.e. it's officially unsupported by
Canonical. Formally, only approved Ubuntu community members (MOTUs)
support  chromium in Ubuntu, while Canonical does  not guarantee any
support at all.

That's the formal aspect at least. In practice, it seems like a
Canonical employee, Chad Miller, thankfully does most (all?) of the
Chromium work. It's a pretty important package after all, but as you can
tell from the not quite optimal security support (still 50+ open
security vulnerabilities right now and generally lagging a few weeks or
months behind with security fixes), it's on a "best-effort" basis. Maybe
Chad does the work in his free time, or it's just a low priority work
task for him. So don't expect an official statement from an Ubuntu
representative because formally, Chromium is not a part of Ubuntu that
Canonical cares about. Use Firefox which is in "main" and the default
browser if you want Canonical support (or maybe if you can pay some
signficant amount of money, Canonical would offer to support Chromium
for you).

It is important to note that shipping Chromium in a distro is very
difficult. Google seems to care about their own packaging, and that's
it. It's not an easy upstream to work with. It has bundled source copies
of libraries, until some time ago not even official release tarballs,
it's a very fast moving target and there is no backwards compatibility
for anything.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1359615

Title:
  [precise] critical: flash stopped working after last update

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