Adobe recommends that you “immediately uninstall” Flash Player. That is how



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It’s 2021, and with the new year, we’re officially seeing the end of Adobe Flash. As previously announced, Adobe has discontinued support for Flash Player (as of January 1, 2021), and Flash content running in Flash Player will be blocked by Adobe as of January 12, 2021. Additionally, Adobe has issued a warning that users “immediately uninstall Flash Player” to “protect their systems.”

Also, you can find notifications on your Adobe computer, reminding you to uninstall Flash Player. In any case, we have compiled a quick tutorial on how to remove Flash Player from your computers, both on Windows and Mac machines.

Windows

If Adobe prompts you, just click “Uninstall” in Flash Player. If not, follow these instructions:

  • Download the Flash Player uninstaller.
  • Close all browsers, along with any other programs that use Flash. To verify this, look at your taskbar and close any programs running in the background.
  • Run the uninstall package.
  • Delete files and folders from Flash Player. Click the Start menu and select “Run.” Walk into: C: Windows system32 Macromed Flash and delete all files in the folder.
  • Do the same in the following location: C: Windows SysWOW64 Macromed Flash% appdata% Adobe Flash Player% appdata% Macromedia Flash Player
  • Then restart your computer and check if Flash Player is completely uninstalled by clicking here.

Note that these instructions do not apply to browser-based installations of Flash Player. For more information on this, click here.

Mac

For macOS, follow these steps:

  • Check your macOS version by clicking About this Mac. Then download the uninstaller files; For macOS 10.4 and 10.5, download this file. For macOS 10.6 and later, click here. For macOS 10.3 and earlier, download this uninstaller.
  • Make sure to close all browsers and applications that can use Flash Player.
  • Run the uninstall package.
  • Restart your computer and verify complete uninstallation by clicking here.

Again, these instructions do not apply to the Flash Player included with Google Chrome. For more information on this, click here.

In case you are wondering why Adobe is ending support for Flash Player, this is the company’s explanation:

Open standards such as HTML5, WebGL, and WebAssembly have continually matured over the years and serve as viable alternatives for Flash content. Also, the major browser vendors are integrating these open standards into their browsers and are deprecating most other plugins (like Flash Player). See Flash Player EOL announcements from Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Mozilla.

By providing more than three years’ notice, Adobe believes that there has been enough time for developers, designers, businesses, and others to migrate Flash content to new standards. EOL’s time was in coordination with some of the major browser vendors. “

Click here to obtain more information.

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