

Macromedia rebranded the tool as Macromedia Flash 1.0 and released it alongside a counterpart browser plugin called Macromedia Flash Player.

The technology was already in use by companies like Microsoft and Disney Online to display animated content in a web browser. In 1996, a company called Macromedia acquired a vector-based web animation tool called FutureSplash, originally released by FutureWave Software in 1993. If you still want to access Flash content, there are options, but none of them are officially supported by Adobe. You should avoid installing any older versions of Flash Player on security grounds. The change is unlikely to affect your daily browsing habits since the vast majority of websites have stopped using Flash in favor of modern browser technologies.

This also means that versions of Flash bundled with browsers like Google Chrome will be retired. There will be no more updates to Flash, nor will you be able to download old versions directly from Adobe. The company recommends that you uninstall Flash entirely as a matter of security. Go back to the file you just changed and you should be able to delete it.Hope this helps.Flash is no longer available to download since December 31, 2020, and Adobe starts blocking Flash content from running altogether on January 12, 2021. I am sure you can also set this at the folder level in advanced settings and force inheritance down the file structure but I just did it file by file to savor the victory one deletion at a time. Go back to the folder in file explorer and you should be able to change permissions (right click on the file name) for each file by security tab in properties - you have to click on Users and edit then again on Users and "edit" to be able to manually set the users permission to full. You will not be able to delete from cmd (I think because you have not changed the permissions yet). You should get a message success for each file. (You can get them all at once by doing "starstar" - Tom's will not let me type in an actual star for some reason).

Navigate to each noted flash folder and "takeown" every file in each folder syntax for this is "takeown /f filename.ext" from within the directory. Run an elevated command prompt "cmd" (as administrator) That is why I took the time to find this.įirst I ran the adobe uninstaller - which as you found - did NOT actually remove everything. I found all the folders and had the same response - not able to delete which freaked me out - I mean hey get rid of Flash due to security issues but then you cannot get rid of these folders or files from my own computer - suspect to say the least. There is probably a much easier way but I could not find it (I do not trust the old "download this super powerful free uninstaller tips). Had the same issue - after hours of banging my head against the wall - I think I did it.
