Confirmed. It broke my SO's ability to do online banking yesterday and I was (as usual) called in as tech support.
I just assumed Java was out of date (again) and was surprised to see it still blacklisted after updating to latest version.
There's no part of the UI saying "We've permanently blocked all of Java by default". Even if you agree with the developer's ideological stance here (which you very well may not), the UX part of the job is completely botched.
You know those big, yellow bars that browser and websites tends to come up with when they want to be 100% certain that the user notices something is up?
I've yet to see a single non-technical user even notice or react to its presence once. I see it instantly and can't understand why it doesn't alert or annoy them, but to them, it's just not there.
In light of that sort of behaviour, adding a subtle icon to the location bar is meaningless. Heck, adding anything to the location bar is meaningless if the intent is to communicate with the user; most users never look there.
So yeah. If that's Mozilla's stance, they will find out that nobody's going to notice. I certainly didn't see it. That is effectively dead code which they've written.
I just assumed Java was out of date (again) and was surprised to see it still blacklisted after updating to latest version.
There's no part of the UI saying "We've permanently blocked all of Java by default". Even if you agree with the developer's ideological stance here (which you very well may not), the UX part of the job is completely botched.