This information applies to Adobe Flash Player on desktop and notebook computers. To change Flash Player settings on mobile devices, visit the. • • • • • • • • • Who uses this Settings Manager?
See Why does Apple hate Adobe and Flash? And Why does everyone hate Flash? If you are stuck needing to access stupidly designed web sites that don't work without Flash, but do not wish to install Flash generally in Mac OS X, you can use the Google Chrome web browser with those web sites, instead of Safari or Mozilla Firefox.
Beginning with Flash Player 10.3, the Local Settings Manager supersedes this Online Settings Manager for managing global settings on Windows, Mac, and Linux computers. The Local Settings Manager can be accessed in the Control Panel on Windows and in System Preferences on Mac. Users of other operating systems and earlier versions of Flash Player can continue to use the Online Settings Manager described here. To access the local Flash Player Settings Manager that is native to your operating system: • Windows: click Start > Settings > Control Panel > Flash Player • Macintosh: System Preferences (under Other) click Flash Player • Linux Gnome: System > Preferences > Adobe Flash Player • Linux KDE: System Settings > Adobe Flash Player To access Help for the local Settings Manager, click any of the individual Learn more. Links on the Settings Manager tabs, or click any of these links: Tab name/Help page URL Storage Camera and Mic Playback Advanced What can I do with the Settings Manager?
Adobe is committed to providing you with options to control SWF or FLV content and applications that run in Adobe Flash Player. The Flash Player Settings Manager lets you manage global privacy settings, storage settings, and security settings, by using the following panels: • To specify whether websites must ask your permission before using your camera or microphone, you use the. • To specify the amount of disk space that websites you haven't yet visited can use to store information on your computer, or to prevent websites you haven't yet visited from storing information on your computer, you use the. • To view or change your security settings, you use the.
Outlook for mac 2016 office 365. Training powerpoint for mac 2011 basics- office support. • To specify if and how often Flash Player should check for updated versions, you use the. • To view or change the privacy settings for websites you have already visited, you use the.
• To view or change the storage settings for websites you have already visited, or to delete information that any or all websites have already stored on your computer, you use the. • To view or change protected media settings, you use the. • To view or change peer-assisted networking settings, you use the. How do I get to the Settings Manager? The Settings Manager is a special control panel that runs on your local computer but is displayed within and accessed from the Adobe website.
Adobe does not have access to the settings that you see in the Settings Manager or to personal information on your computer. Click the links below to open the specific Settings Manager panel that you want. The Settings Manager that you see on the page is not an image; it is the actual Settings Manager. To change your settings, click the tabs to see different panels, and then click the options in the Settings Manager panels that you see on the web page.
• • • • • • • • The settings in the Settings Manager apply to all websites that contain SWF or FLV content, rather than just a specific website. What are privacy settings? Applications that run in Flash Player may want to have access to the camera and/or microphone available on your computer. Privacy settings let you specify whether you want applications from a particular website to have such access. Note that it is the person or company that has created the application you are using that is requesting such access, not Adobe (unless Adobe has created the application that wants access to your camera or microphone). It is the responsibility of the person or company requesting access to make it clear to you why they want access and how they plan to use the audio or video.