https://www.infoworld.com/d/applications/occupy-flash-movement-wants-adobes-plug-in-dead-179355
'Occupy Flash' movement wants Adobe's plug-in dead
Keeping Flash Player alive on the desktop doesn't accomplish anything, say mobile app developers who want Adobe to kill the browser plug-in
And the group didn't mince words why it was after Flash Player.
Occupy Flash comes to bury, not praise, Adobe's Flash Player plug-in for desktop browsers.
"Flash Player is dead. Its time has passed. It's buggy. It crashes a lot. It requires constant security updates," http://occupyflash.org/
Our goal: To get the world to uninstall the Flash Player plugin from their desktop browsers.
The only way to truly force the web to embrace modern open standards is to invalidate old technology.
Now let's be clear: Disabling Flash Player in your browser will likely mean that some of the sites you use regularly are less usable (We're looking at you, Google Analytics. For shame!). Should you choose to join the movement, there will be some pain and sacrifice involved in your decision. But the more of us who run browsers that don't support Flash, the quicker that pain will subside.
Note: This is not a campaign against Adobe, or even their Flash platform. We're sure there are plenty of good uses for it, such as building great Air applications, for example. In fact, Adobe has stated they believe HTML5 is the future of web browsing. We're simply trying to help them get there a little faster (Sidenote: Adobe, if you're reading this, how about manning-up and supporting this site, like Microsoft did with the IE6 Funeral)
Use HTML5 Options when available
Many sites are starting to support HTML5 for things that once required Flash. For example, you can use YouTube without Flash by going to http://www.youtube.com/html5 and opting in to their non-Flash video player