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If you’re a Chrome user, which you should be, you probably have noticed that Flash
is blocked by default in the browser. Google does not like Flash because of the
major security flaws inherent in Flash and therefore does everything in its power to
force you not to use Flash.
The only problem is there are still a lot of sites that use Flash. None of the major
sites you visit every day like Facebook, Instagram, etc. use it, but a lot of smaller
and older sites just haven’t bothered to switch to HTML 5. For example, I am taking
a Cisco course at my local community college and in order to complete the
assignments, I have to log into Cisco’s NetAcademy website. The problem is that
some of the questions require Flash to view and answer.
If you do a quick Google search for enabling Flash in Chrome, you’ll see a lot of
articles telling you to download Flash from Adobe’s website and install it (which
won’t work) or to open a Chrome tab and go to chrome://plugins (which also won’t
work anymore). In the most recent version of Chrome (57), you can no longer
manage plugins by going to that URL. Instead, you’ll just get a “This site can’t be
reached” message.
This is terribly unintuitive and really confused me because I was used to going
there to enable or disable Flash as needed. Now it seems they only want you to
enable it for the specific sites where it is needed. In this article, I’ll explain how to
get Flash to work when you need it and how to keep it disabled otherwise.