BoxingRock wrote:his post is still highly inappropriate though
What's inappropriate about it? It's a problem that might be resolved by Seatribe, but would it be practical, if its even possible? Chrome autoflags Java as well as any executable or installation files depending on your security settings. Firefox and Edge do the same. Java has the added problem of "perception of reliability" as there have been some glaring security issues in the past. Warnings are just that--warnings. The end user needs to pay attention and make an informed decision on if they trust the site or not. The warning doesn't make the software bad just because it shows up. You shouldn't be asking developers to jump through hoops to circumvent warnings--it ends up being a scam that lets bad software through the gates and blocks legitimate software from being able to compete with those that can "afford" to buy their way through the gates.
Don't like the warnings? Buy and use a suite of good security software to run anything you download through that instead of relying on your browser's sketchy warnings. And let me emphasize buy good security software, not use free or adware-supported security software.
Personally, I never cared for Chrome. Google (now Alphabet) treats the browser (and anything you look at through it) just like Gmail, Facebook does with anything you look at or post, etc--sells it to anyone buying and tracks you all over the Internet. Use whatever browser you want or need to. Firefox is currently the leanest running of all the major browsers. Chrome has a lot of extras that are nice to have if you use them. A lot of business software still demands you only use Internet Explorer to access servers with. Some people are just fine with whatever was installed with their operating system. Just learn to use your browser and modify it to suit your needs. Demanding others change what they are doing to meet some arbitrary standard is just bad manners. I'd agree if bad practices were being used, but they aren't.
Opinions expressed in this statement are the authors alone and in no way reflect on the game development values of the actual developers.