I'm having problems with my daughter's laptop (Dell Inspiron)and the Adobe flash player. She is running firefox. (I am too on our home computer, and have no problems with Adobe, only on her laptop) Whenever she plays games, the flash window is too small, and she cannot enlarge it to do all the actions needed in the games. (I've downloaded the latest version). In some games, right-clicking allows me to expand the window, but as soon as she clicks something on the game and it goes to another part of it, the window returns to the smaller view. And some games right clicking just gives me the settings and about options. I've tried changing the resoloution on her computer, although I knew this probably wouldn't help, and it did not affect the player at all. Any help is appreciated.
I have a similar problem that wasn't solved by the previous solutions. On certain sites, like mlb.com, the flash player is used to look at scores, videos, etc.. but when I use Ctrl++ to increase the screen size the areas that use FP remain the same size - thus creating a gap because everything around the FP window grows but it does not. How can I increase the size of the FP window as well? thanks!
I am having the same problem. It happens when I'm streaming flash videos. The flash video is too small for the frame or not centered correctly. Changing the zoom of the webpage does not fix the issue. I've tried reinstalling flash but that doesn't seem to fix the problem.
I don't know if this is exactly the same problem, but my cafe world game window refuses to show the whole game. The controls on the left side and bottom are covered by advertisements, no matter what resolution I use. Ctrl+ and Ctrl- do nothing useful, full screen vs. reduced doesn't effect this. Ctrl O merely sent me to another entirely different page on the web. I enclose a piccy of my problem, and would love it if someone could come with a solution. Thanks for any help provided.
Thank you for the Ctrl ++ and Ctrl -- It finally worked. For anyone who is still having trouble: It would not work when I had the cursor clicked on the Farmville window, I had to go outside the window and click on the white surrounding area, then hit Ctrl+ three times before my window was large enough to see the gift box and all the other perimeter items that were off the edge before. I don't know how it got so small to start with, it wasn't always that way, but for the last 3 months I haven't been able to use my desktop (the one with the problem) - could only use the laptop. I tried this on the laptop and it works there too! Thanks again! You made my day!
Analyzer works in conjunction with flash player and unfortunately, there is no possible way out here. We have analyzer similar reporting and managing tool called GMS which also uses flash till version GMS 9.2 and this is fixed from version 9.3. With analyzer the latest version is 8.5 and it doesn't work without flash.
The replacement for Analyzer is Analytics 2.5 on prem with Syslog, soon to be updated to 3.1 I believe, not sure why SonicWall have not told you this, N.B. afaik this is only for Virtual appliances ( Hyperv & ESXi ) not Windows.
One of the issue that I have which I didn't find any answer is Adobe flash player, I excluded the site from decryption but still after downloading the flash player exe upadte file I get "connection error" from the installation.
And what are you doing with other clients that installed on end points and tries to communicate outside the ssl decryption is breaking the connection because the client doesn't like the interfere or timeouts.
I make an exception for *.adobe.com because of this issue; but you could create a "log-all" URL-Filtering profile and attach that to a test machine and a test policy and see what URLs are actively being hit when you attempt this communication if you want to not utilize a wildcard.
So I was cleaning out my downloads folder when I came across an "Adobe Flash Player.dmg", I assumed it must have just been some sort of update when I needed a flash player for something on the browser. So I opened it and when in installer window popped up I (stupidly) without even looking just double clicked on the icon which was titled "install.command" (see pics). Terminal then opened up and ran some code, which I've saved, I'll just paste the code it ran right here. Anyone able to tell me what this did, if I need to worry about it, and if so how to get rid of it? Thanks.
just for information : staff team might also require the sample and vt results in order to check if the malware is detected by the malwarebytes or not, if it is not already detected, they might add a detection against the sample.
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I just upgraded to Firefox 45.0.1 and I installed Flash Player 21 apparently successfully according to the loader. But when I go to Acorn TC and load on of the shows I follow, Acorn's website reports that I need to load the most recent version of Flash Player.
21 is the most recent version of flash player for Windows 7 64 bit and I have installed it and uninstalled it several times with Firefox and all other software that uses flash player closed. I have even tried this in Firefox safe mode - all to no avail.
When I change that to "Always Activate", Shockwave Flash works fine, so I guess that somehow, during the installation of Adobe Flash Player 21 that setting was switched from "On" to "Off" and I failed to realize that Shockwave Flash and Adobe Flash are one and the same.
Firefox doesn't find the Shockwave Flash plugin because it doesn't show in the System Detail list, so if you have it installed then the correct registry key that Firefox inspects to find installed plugins is missing.
My log file shows ESET detected and deleted this threat four times between 7:19:52 and 7:28:07 PM which probably represents the number of times I clicked on the Delete button before the pop up went away (I saw no other way to get rid of the pop up other than allowing the update to proceed). There's a gap of about eight minutes between the first delete entry and the second through fourth entry which all are within seconds of each other.
The download installer for FlashPlayer includes bundled McAfee security add-ons: . If you didn't manually exclude those during the installation process, Eset might be triggering on those add-ons and identifying them as Kryptik malware versus flagging them as PUA's.
Your screen shot shows that the Eset detection was memory based. As such, offline scanning would not have detected it. The shown Eset detection is a post-execution one. That is the FlashPlayer installer had loaded into memory and began executing.
Just now on this laptop the following window popped up. I don't know what language it is and I don't understand why it changed from English . . . but it seems strange that it would happen at the same time that I have this issue with the Flash installer . . .
The downloaded FlashPlayer installer was not infected per se. Part of that installer processing would be to uninstall the existing version of Abode FlashPlayer on the device. It was during this processing that Eset detected Krypytik malware. In other words, the existing Abode FlashPlayer installation or files associated with it had been infected with Krypytik malware.
Run a full scan on the device where the Eset alert appeared; i.e. custom scan selecting "This PC" checkbox, which will populate all subordinate settings - operating memory, boot sectors, and all hard drives. Select the "Scan as Administrator" tab. Then review scan results for any Eset detections.
I am still confused as to why ESET didn't also detect the Kryptik variant on my desktop when I ran the Flash installer there. I was updating from the same previous version of Flash to the same current version of Flash.
As I posted previously, it appears that nothing was wrong with the FlashPlayer installer you downloaded. But rather that your laptop device was infected with Kryptik malware; most likely the existing FlashPlayer installation was infected.
Although the full Eset scan of Eset showed no malware present, the Eset renewal popup in what appears to be Cyrillic language; e.g. Russian, is not a good sign. It would be indicative of a possible compromised Eset installation. Or the renewal popup you are observing is a fake one being possibly generated by the Kryptik or some other malware.
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