Cyber Week Sale:

Save 50% on a 3-month Digiday+ membership. Ends Dec 5.

SUBSCRIBE

Google is banning Flash ads beginning in 2017

The long, dark night of Flash’s soul just got a little bleaker. Google announced that it’s banning the technology from its advertising network.

Advertisers won’t be allowed to upload display ads using Flash to the Google Display Network beginning June 30 of this year, and on Jan. 2, 2017, the company will stop displaying ads using Flash, essentially eradicating the network of Adobe’s malware-prone software.

Moving forward, Google is telling advertisers to use the safer HMTL5, so they “can reach the widest possible audience across screens.”

Flash has been on the decline for the past several years, with Google being on the forefront of shoving it into a coffin. Last August, Google stopped displaying ads using Flash on its popular Chrome browser, eight months after it made HTML5 videos default on YouTube.

Google isn’t alone in no longer using Flash as Amazon, Firefox and even The New York Times no longer rely on the technology. Even Adobe rolled out a Flash alternative last year, pushing developers to Animate CC, a HTML5-based technology.

More in Marketing

Ulta, Best Buy and Adidas dominate AI holiday shopping mentions

The brands that are seeing the biggest boost from this shift in consumer behavior are some of the biggest retailers. 

U.K. retailer Boots leads brand efforts to invest in ad creative’s data layer

For media dollars to make an impact, brands need ad creative that actually hits. More CMOs are investing in pre- and post-flight measurement.

‘AI is permeating everything we do’: How Guitar Center developed 2 AI tools this year

This summer, the company launched a chatbot called Rig Advisor to help customers find the right instruments and products.