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Microsoft will completely remove Adobe Flash from Windows with an upcoming update. Windows 10 and older versions of Windows will receive the update.
Microsoft ended support for Flash Player in December. Upcoming Windows 10 updates will fully take the software off your device.
Microsoft will add a Windows update to remove Adobe Flash to Windows Server Update Service in early 2021.
Microsoft has released a Windows update that removes Adobe's Flash Player before it reaches end of support on December 31, 2020. Update KB4577586 is part of Microsoft's effort to follow through ...
Microsoft is preparing to issue two more Windows 10 updates in June and July that will eliminate unsupported Adobe Flash Player from Windows PCs for good. The update KB4577586 called "Update for ...
Today, however, Adobe is going one step further by showing alerts within Windows 10 encouraging Flash Player users to go ahead and uninstall the application right now.
Windows 10 is being automatically updated to remove the last remnant of Adobe's defunct Flash Player, which no longer works anyway.
With the Flash Player officially reaching the end of life tomorrow, Adobe has started to display alerts on Windows computers recommending that users uninstall Flash Player.
Goodbye again, Flash—Microsoft makes removal from Windows 10 mandatory Windows "Update for Removal of Adobe Flash Player" becomes mandatory this July.
The second caveat is that this apparently only removes the 32-bit Adobe Flash Player baked into Windows, that is found within the Control Panel.
At the end of 2020, Adobe will officially kill Flash. Microsoft is taking a pre-emptive strike though by using an optional Windows Update to both uninstall and block Flash from being reinstalled ...
Windows 8 will support Adobe Flash, but because of security concerns it will only run when you visit select trusted websites.
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