Apple Won't Push Flash Player Updates
Flash updates will no longer arrive with Apple security updates, and new MacBook Air arrives without Flash installed, one week after the company distanced itself from Java.In the latest twist to the apparent spat between Apple and Adobe, Flash updates will reportedly no longer be automatically pushed to users by Apple as part of its security updates.
Likewise, Apple's new MacBook Air will not ship with Flash installed.
More Software Insights
Webcasts
- Techniques for Next-Gen Data Protection using Next-Gen Computing
- Best Practices for Improving Database Testing: Upgrades, migrations, business growth and more - ensuring you can handle the workload!
White Papers
- Open Source Governance in Highly Regulated Companies
- Accelerating delivery of smarter products and services on System z
Reports
More >>The news followed an apparent detente last month in the Apple and Adobe relationship, after Apple announced that it would begin allowing iOS developers to translate their applications from Flash.
"Is this a continuance of the battle Steve Jobs is waging against Flash on the iPhone and iPad? Who knows," said Chester Wisniewski, senior security advisor at Sophos. "What I do know is that this is clearly a bad sign for the hope that Apple is committed to securing the Mac platform."
That's because Flash can't update itself. Users of Firefox and Chrome browsers, however, will see their Flash plug-in get automatically updated, though Safari users will not.
Of course, Adobe has been busy patching Flash lately, owing to numerous zero-day vulnerabilities and rapid subsequent attacks aimed at exploiting those bugs to gain control of people's computers.
Many Flash users, as a result, will need to source Flash updates on their own. According to Wisniewski, "Adobe has announced its intention to provide an auto-update application for Flash, but it remains to be seen when this will ship."
Apple's apparent Flash fatwa follows on the heels of the company decision to drop support for Java from future versions of its Mac OS X operating system, as revealed last week in its Java for Mac OS X 10.6 Update 3 release notes.
According to Apple: "The Java runtime ported by Apple and that ships with Mac OS X is deprecated," meaning no longer supported. "Developers should not rely on the Apple-supplied Java runtime being present in future versions of Mac OS X."
SEE ALSO:
See the latest collaboration tools and technologies at Enterprise 2.0 Santa Clara's comprehensive conference and expo. It happens Nov. 8-11, 2010, in Santa Clara, Calif. Find out more.
Related Reading
| To upload an avatar photo, first complete your Disqus profile. | View the list of supported HTML tags you can use to style comments. | Please read our commenting policy. |
Subscribe to RSSResource Links
Related Webcasts
- Unlock the Value of Your Business Data: IBM's Integration Solution for .NET Environments
- SMB Server Guide: Meeting Email, Virtualization, and Business Application Challenges
- Collaborative DevOps: Bridging the gap between development and operations with automation
- Best Practices for Improving Database Testing: Upgrades, migrations, business growth and more - ensuring you can handle the workload!
- Insurance Workforce Optimization: How To Work Smarter To Benefit Your Customers, Employees and the Bottom Line
This Week's Issue
Free Print Subscription
SubscribeCurrent Healthcare Issue
- InformationWeek Healthcare CIO 25: Our second annual honor roll of the health IT leaders driving healthcare's transformation.
- EHR Unreadiness: Only a small percentage of physicians planning to apply for Meaningful Use funds have e-health record systems capable of achieving most of the requirements. .
- And much more!
- Read the Current Issue
Related Whitepapers
Featured Broadcast
Organizations must rigorously protect their data from all threats - including theft by outsiders and insiders, malicious attacks that can distort or destroy data, and inadvertent corruption or misuse by employees.Download this white paper and find out how to safeguard data and fulfill compliance mandates.
Learn More













