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Unity Technologies Inc. has announced that as of March 2016 it will no longer support the Unity Web Player plugin, which currently allows developers to release games for web browsers using the ...
Unity is set to end support for Web Player as browser vendors move away from plug-ins. Google, Microsoft and Mozilla are all ending support for plug-ins in Chrome, Edge and Firefox. A lack of ...
Unity Web Player installed but not working in Chrome or Firefox The main cause of the problem is that most leading browsers ended support for NPAPI plugins which were initially used by Unity Web ...
Unity games can also be deployed on the Web, but this function currently uses a browser plug-in, the Unity Web Player. The early access will remove the need for the plug-in.
A zero-day vulnerability has been disclosed in the popular Unity Web Player browser plugin. The flaw allows an attacker crossdomain access to websites and services using the victim’s credentials.
The latest version of Chrome doesn't have support for a specific plugin (NPAPI, specifically) that the Unity Web Player relies on, and Unity says that Firefox's support for plugins is going the ...
In a demo posted on YouTube, the researcher shows how a flaw in the Unity Web Player could let an attacker access a Gmail account.
Back in March, Unity announced that they’d soon allow developers to deploy Unity-based games to the web without the need for any plugins, thanks to the magic of WebGL. Unity’s WebGL ...
The Unity game engine won’t be the only option for plugin-free browser-based 3D gaming though. Mozilla is also working with Epic Games to bring Unreal Engine to the browser.
A number of games already exist that use the Unity Web Player plugin, but Mozilla says the new, plugin-free model will increase the number of users for online games.