Google has not announced that they will completely remove Flash Player from Chrome. They have a roadmap (https://www.chromium.org/flash-roadmap), and this is what it says:
We will continue to ship Flash Player with Chrome, and if a site truly > requires Flash, a prompt will appear at the top of the page when the user > first visits that site, giving them the option of allowing it to run for > that site > Between now and October 2017, Chrome will increase the number of websites where they force HTML by default. When a website defaults to HTML, but it requires Flash Player, a prompt will ask the user if they want to allow Flash Player. Once they have allowed Flash Player on a website, they won't be asked again for the same website. After October 2017, all websites will be HTML by default in Chrome, but users will still be able to enable Flash Player. Here is a mockup of what the experience will be like when your site is forced to HTML by default: https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/106_KLNJfwb9L-1hVVa4i29aw1YXUy9qFX-Ye4kvJj-4/edit#slide=id.g1270f83468_0_12 As you can see, if your site displays a fallback message when a user doesn't have Flash Player installed, that's what Chrome users will start to see. In my opinion, it might be smart to display a different message for Chrome users that tells them to "enable" or "allow" Flash Player instead of "install" it. - Josh On Mon, Dec 19, 2016 at 9:03 AM, mark goldin <[email protected]> wrote: > I just got this from a customer: > > For your information, from February 2017, Chrome will suggest/redirect to a > html5 webpage if there are objects in a webpage in Flash (but still ok) > > > > From October 2017, Adobe Flash will not be supported anymore on Chrome > > > Are there any resources to support or not to out there? > > > Thanks >
