


This is obviously specific to Google Chrome, and many other web browsers in modern MacOS releases do not support Adobe Flash Player at all. If you have a SWF file you can play and view it on the Mac as shown here, which may be useful if the Flash file you are looking to play or site you are looking to use it on is locally stored.

Chrome will automatically keep itself updated however, but you can disable Chrome automatic software update and Google Software Update if you wish to preserve an older copy, often it’s best to do that in combination with having an installation of Chrome Canary so that you can have the most recent version of Chrome available as well as each new version typically includes important security improvements and fixes. Thus if you want to use Chrome and Flash down the road, you’d need to keep an older copy of the browser installed for those purposes. Remember, Flash is going to be deprecated from Chrome and by Adobe at the end of the year, meaning later versions of the browser will not include native support for Flash at all. Alternatively, you can visit the following URL in Chrome, replacing the site name “as needed to customize Flash abilities directly:Ĭhrome://settings/content/siteDetails?site=https%3A%2F%2FSo that’s how you enable and use Flash in the latest Chrome web browsers on Mac or PC.Now visit any website where you wish to use Flash in Chrome, when Flash is available to load you can click into the URL bar to enable it on that website.

