One small question...
When will The Register stop using Flash for videos?
Malwarebytes hacker Jerome Segura says black hats have made a mess of efforts to unleash an Adobe Flash zero day vulnerability as part of their popular exploit kit, reducing the pool of potential victims. If done right, the remote code execution exploit had the potential to hurt millions of Flash users, but Adobe was able to …
It comes as Microsoft announced its Edge browser would nix "non-central" Flash content in webpages by default and recommending content creators move to non-fatal alternatives including HTML5.
Since Flash can't be removed from Win10, then this is meaningless. Flash will continue since every Win10 machine will have it. If MS were serious, they would just kill it at the source and not allow it into the system.