Perhaps most importantly, the browser will
block Flash content by default, prompting the user to decide if they want to allow it once or always.
Hey i live in a third - world country and here everybody uses
flash like everyday basis and little bastards like you who want to think they are elite use iTunes and apple shit without Flash... Mind you i use Adblockr and block ads (flash) and yet there is not one day i browse the web and do nt handle flash, which oh... proves that there is content on the web delivered as flash content and that is not actually
flash like everyday basis and little bastards like you who want to think they are elite use iTunes and apple shit without
Flash... Mind you i use Adblockr and block ads (flash) and yet there is not one day i browse the web and do nt handle flash, which oh... proves that there is content on the web delivered as flash content and that is not actually
Flash... Mind you i use Adblockr and
block ads (
flash) and yet there is not one day i browse the web and do nt handle flash, which oh... proves that there is content on the web delivered as flash content and that is not actually
flash) and yet there is not one day i browse the web and do nt handle
flash, which oh... proves that there is content on the web delivered as flash content and that is not actually
flash, which oh... proves that there is
content on the web delivered as
flash content and that is not actually
flash content and that is not actually AD!!
It does include some websites, typically those under 300 pages, whose
content may be partially hidden or
blocked from search engine indexing because of
flash design.