
Pale Moon's source code is released under the Mozilla Public License 2.0 except for parts relating to branding. However, a contributed build for Linux is available that supports some older processors. The official releases do not support older processors without the SSE2 instruction set. The final version for Snow Leopard is the foundation for the Arctic Fox web browser.

The end of XP support was quickly followed by Pale Moon getting at least two forks of its own, both of which take the most recent Pale Moon code and recompile it for XP New Moon by roytam1, and Mypal by Feodor2. Version 27.9.4 was the final official release to support Windows Vista as well as the final unofficial release for Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard. Version 26.5 was the final official release to support Windows XP. Uses the IP-API service instead of Google's for geolocation.Defaults to DuckDuckGo as the search engine instead of Google or Yahoo!.Defaults to a customizable start page in cooperation with.These include retention of "Complete Themes", themes which apply to the entire UI of the browser rather than affecting only a few elements, support for which was removed in Firefox. Supports add-ons exclusive to Pale Moon, including dozens of themes.Continues add-on support for XUL, XPCOM, and NPAPI plugins, all of which are no longer supported in Firefox.Uses the pre-Australis Firefox user interface.


Harman, can assist Enterprise customers identify solutions for their content. It will provide support and security updates for customers who require commercial support options beyond the EOL date. Also, the major browser vendors are integrating the open standards into their browsers and deprecating other plug-ins, such as Flash Player.Īfter 2020, Adobe’s long-term distribution partner, Harman will be the official enterprise distributor for Flash Player. Most websites have since long switched to HTML5, which is a more efficient and secure coding option. Open standards such as HTML5, WebGL, and WebAssembly can serve as viable alternatives for Flash content. Chrome and Firefox have already published their projections around when they'll stop supporting Flash. At most, they provide an 'allow once' option to allow Flash. (end-of-life date).Īll major browser vendors, block Flash Player making it difficult to view Flash content. Adobe will stop updating and distributing Flash Player after December 31, 2020.
