![]() flash allowed these for almost a decade before they were available in the browser by default, and the security model of the internet didn't really take them into account. So you have Js, css, html, wasm, lots of stuff managed by the big board of representatives from different companies and interests: but then you have adobe (and before them, Macromedia) doing their own thing. ![]() how else would nearly every server and browser and other client be able speak to each other and understand one another? ) it has access to networking and storage features without the security controls decided on for browser tech by the w3c (standards council for just about everything related to the internet. Much of the reason to drop flash is it has higher privileges than anything in the browser because it's not strictly in the browser, and not beholden to the same standards.
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