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YouTube Ditches Flash For HTML5 Video By Default 225

An anonymous reader writes: YouTube today announced it has finally stopped using Adobe Flash by default. The site now uses its HTML5 video player by default in Google's Chrome, Microsoft's IE11, Apple's Safari 8, and in beta versions of Mozilla's Firefox browser. At the same time, YouTube is now also defaulting to its HTML5 player on the web. In fact, the company is deprecating the "old style" Flash object embeds and its Flash API, pointing users to the iFrame API instead, since the latter can adapt depending on the device and browser you're using.
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YouTube Ditches Flash For HTML5 Video By Default

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  • Now if only... (Score:5, Informative)

    by msobkow ( 48369 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @05:58PM (#48918825) Homepage Journal

    Now if only Bell Media/CTV here in Canada would do the same. They are the ONLY family of websites I know of that won't work with the Linux versions of Flash, complaining that you need an update because they check for the WINDOWS version numbers.

  • I am so glad to see this. I tended to watch videos on my macbook quite a bit and always hated that the massive load it put on my system because of how crappy flash was on a mac (or anything else).

    Now if google would just announce no more flash allowed in ads, we'd be set.
    • Re:About D%^& time. (Score:5, Informative)

      by kosmosik ( 654958 ) <kos@kosmoMONETsik.net minus painter> on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @06:19PM (#48919057) Homepage

      > Now if google would just announce no more flash allowed in ads, we'd be set.

      If you are using Chrome you can set "Click to play" policy for all plugins in chrome://settings/content - as result you won't see any Flash ads (or any other plugins) without clicking on the placeholder. This way you get rid of Flash ads and it is also way more secure to just do not run plugins if you don't explicitly want to. You can also turn on plugins on a white list per site basis.

    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      Now if google would just announce no more flash allowed in ads, we'd be set.

      Why would you willingly watch ads?

    • Now if google would just announce no more flash allowed in ads, we'd be set.

      Since I don't have Flash installed, I've been delighted that so many ads are Flash-based.

  • All I care about is can we lose the ads?
    • That depends. Do you live in a country where Google's Music Key service is available?

    • Ads are actually coming from Google's ContentID. ContentID scans uploaded media against signatures. The signatures are of licensed artwork like f.e. "Rick Astley - Never Gonna Give You Up" - so if you are Rick Astley and upload your signature video to Google then you can set policy if somebody f.e. posts video in which the licensed artwork is used and ContentID matches it. The policy can be AFAIK to: just inform you about match but do nothing; block the content entirely or display an ad before the content -

    • Re:Ads (Score:4, Insightful)

      by mjwx ( 966435 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @08:10PM (#48919793)

      All I care about is can we lose the ads?

      Actually this is going to make things worse.

      When the annoying, music playing, flashing punch the monkey ads were in flash, it was trivial to block them using something like flashblock because you simply stopped the plugin from running.

      Now adblockers are going to have to parse the code making it very easy for ads to avoid detection and masquerade as content.

    • Yes
      https://adblockplus.org/ [adblockplus.org]

  • by crgrace ( 220738 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @06:00PM (#48918855)

    But, but, who is going to remind me every 36 hours that a new version of flash I need to download (along with crapware) is available?

  • channel customization to remove the bland look like it is now.

  • 3, 2, 1... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sribe ( 304414 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @06:12PM (#48918977)

    Just uninstalled Flash minutes ago. I'd been thinking about it for a while, but this pushed me to take action.

    Now if I run into any site that requires it, I'll just go away.

    • I have both flash and java turned off. It's really surprising how much faster web pages load without all those autoplay ads.

    • Yeah, I've been waiting for YouTube to drop Flash (and for Firefox to get up to speed with other browsers in terms of HTML5 video playback). I've avoided installing Java if I don't have anything that uses it (if only LibreOffice didn't use Java; alas!), I don't have Adobe Reader installed (previously there was Foxit, and now there's pdf.js in Firefox), and now I'm going to hold the same policy for Flash.

      Flash (and by extension Shockwave) had their time as an extension to interactive multimedia back in the

  • by CrashNBrn ( 1143981 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @06:24PM (#48919111)
    Every time I've tried the "HTML5 video" on YouTube, it would:
    1) lose sync, or just stop loading,
    2) wouldn't let you pause/resume, and
    3) didn't properly cache so you could "rewind" without streaming (download the same bits) again.

    Or is YouTube yet another site that's now "Best Viewed in Chrome" (TM) ?
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @06:42PM (#48919245)

      No, this is Google we're talking about here.

      Fantastic Ideas, Half-Assed Implementation, Terrible Follow-Thru, Limited Product Lifetime.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by MartinD ( 7344 )

      I dunno, the HTML5 feature in my Chrome is so CPU intensive that html5 video stops & stutters constantly. I had to disable html5 in Chrome just to be able to use the utoobz HTML5 isn't old-hardware-friendly. Nevermind that Google keeps taking the useful (for me) features out of chrome.

  • I tried setting Chrome to use HTML5 on YouTube for about a month. I had to switch it back to flash because of one thing - Flashblock. With flashblock, you can open a bunch of videos at once in different tabs, and they will not start playing until you flip to the tab and click the flashblock button. With HTML5, all those videos start playing in the background tabs simultaneously as soon as the pages finish loading. So you're basically limited to opening one video at a time. No queuing up videos you want
  • by unixisc ( 2429386 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @07:09PM (#48919445)

    The site now uses its HTML5 video player by default in ............... beta versions of Mozilla's Firefox browser.

    So if one is using FireFox, does YouTube work w/o Flash? I thought it was stuck on the WebM vs Ogg Theora debate, which was why as far as YouTube went, FireFox had no option but to do Flash.

    On a different note, how is GNU's GNASH?

    • I've been using HTML5 w/Firefox for a while now, and I also have Flashblock, which I have to click first to get the vids to play (despite their caching, which gets discarded upon clicking the flash to play).

    • by caseih ( 160668 )

      Though it may not be using mp4, but rather webm, if you install the wonderful YouTube central add-on in Firefox, you can have it force HTML5 player. Seems to work but playback doesn't seem as smooth as with flash, ironically.

  • Come again? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Tuesday January 27, 2015 @07:16PM (#48919499)

    [YouTube] now uses its HTML5 video player by default in Google's Chrome, Microsoft's IE11, Apple's Safari 8, and in beta versions of Mozilla's Firefox browser. At the same time, YouTube is now also defaulting to its HTML5 player on the web.

    You mean the web you browse with Google's Chrome, Microsoft's IE11, Apple's Safari 8, and in beta versions of Mozilla's Firefox?
    Am I missing something here, or are these sentences completely redundant?

    • YouTube = youtube.com
      "Player on the Web" = embedded YouTube videos on non-youtube.com web pages.

    • [YouTube] now uses its HTML5 video player by default in Google's Chrome, Microsoft's IE11, Apple's Safari 8, and in beta versions of Mozilla's Firefox browser. At the same time, YouTube is now also defaulting to its HTML5 player on the web.

      You mean the web you browse with Google's Chrome, Microsoft's IE11, Apple's Safari 8, and in beta versions of Mozilla's Firefox? Am I missing something here, or are these sentences completely redundant?

      Its that dept of redundancy dept thing.

  • Breaks the "download" functionality supported by by various plugins.
  • If I switch my user agent to "iPad", the videos play just fine in Safari 7 too.

  • The 2014 versions of Creative Cloud removed Flash export from Premiere, After Effects and Media Converter. If you wanted to retain that functionality, you needed to install a previous version that supported it.

    They're concentrating on the other web formats it seems. Someone even created a .webm plugin for Premiere and Media Converter. I doubt Adobe is worried about Flash, they have plenty of other applications that are heavily used.

    Photoshop, Lightroom, Premiere, After Effects and Audition being the ones
  • The only reason Im using Flash on YT is Google insistence on forcing VP8 on my old Core2 laptop (intel GPU means no hardware video accel).
    h.264 with mplayer plays perfectly in 1080p
    h.264 with flash plays perfectly in 720p
    VP8 with HTML5 stutters in 720p, and still drops frames in 640x480

    If/when they finally remove Flash option I will be forced to script direct mplayer streaming of mp4 files from YT server bypassing their player altogether.

  • Debian Wheezy on a i686, 2 gigs ram, 2200 intel core2, nvidia card using nouveau,and with Google Chrome latest stable i went to Youtube and the videos are still showing mixed results, some run smoothly without hitting the CPU much at all, others suck the life out of the CPU @ !00% even worse than compiling source code so my first impression of HTML-5 video is that i am not impressed
  • Shitty video streaming for everyone whether you like it or not! Hurrah!!!

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