
Microsoft has also time-bombed their own browser, as have many of the other majors, Chrome, Firefox etc.Īpple effectively blocked Flash some time ago.Īdobe have removed all Flash downloads & all major browsers have also blocked it in their latest versions.įrom Adobe Flash Player EOL General Information Page The Flash plugin itself is responsible for the block, as of 12 Jan. This answer now probably more closely reflects the 'official stance'. There are potential workarounds in other answers below.

For continuous usage in a browser, I'd prefer following Tetsujin's recommendation and try a standalone but supported Flash player, such as Newgrounds'.
Adobe flash player for windows 10 firefox Offline#
Note: In my case, the application using Flash works offline and should present minimal security risks. Note: the linked page mentions mmc.cfg, but my Flash folder had a mms.cfg file instead maybe it was a typo, but in any case I added the EOLUninstallDisable=1 line. I just tested an offline desktop application which had stopped working, and it works again.

properties > security > advanced > delete the "DENY Everyone" permission NOTE: Flash32_32_0_0_453.ocx (and Flash64) will always be write protected (C:\Windows\SysWOW64\Macromed\Flash on 64-bit) I managed to make the "time bomb defuser" work, as indicated here: Disable EOL uninstall warnings:Īdd "EOLUninstallDisable=1" to mmc.cfg in C:\WINDOWS\system32\Macromed\Flash
