Windows Now Running Two Versions Of Flash

Adobe has confirmed that many PCs are now required to run two separate versions of its Flash Player due to a software installer problem.

The development is likely to further increase tensions with users and IT administrators over the use of Flash, which has become a common target for attackers due to its broad use and the presence of many systems running unpatched versions.

Increased burden

The fact of two distinct builds of Flash Player on a system is an additional burden for those managing the system, since both versions must be kept up-to-date with security patches.

Flash has long been included by default with many web browsers.

Adobe confirmed that it has released a Flash Player build, version 22.0.0.210, for Windows operating systems later than Windows 8.1 running the Internet Explorer browser, in order to fix an installer bug that only affected those systems.

The bug displayed an error message telling users that they required administrator access in order to install the software, while silently installing it in the background.

“This version fixed an installer bug that caused a false error dialog to appear on systems that had Internet Explorer running during certain updates,” Adobe said in a statement.

Security concern

For other systems, including Windows 8.1 systems running Internet Explorer and any Windows system running browsers such as Firefox, Chrome or Opera, the most up-to-date version of Flash Player is 22.0.0.209, Adobe said.

Computers requiring both builds, such as a Windows 10 system running both Internet Explorer and Firefox, would now need to run the two versions of Flash Player, Adobe said.

The two builds were released as part of Microsoft’s monthly Windows software update, and both included fixes for 52 security bugs, many of which could be remotely exploited to take over a system, Adobe said.

Media outlets reported that some IT administrators had been forced to apply a second round of security patches for systems needing both versions of Flash Player.

Ongoing security issues with Flash have led Google to plan to disable it by default in its Chrome browser starting this autumn, but a security firm recently warned that the use of HTML5, the technology seen as Flash’s successor, was unlikely to make systems more secure.

Are you a security pro? Try our quiz!

Matthew Broersma

Matt Broersma is a long standing tech freelance, who has worked for Ziff-Davis, ZDnet and other leading publications

Recent Posts

Google Jarvis AI Extension Leaked On Chrome Store

Seemingly accidental leak reveals Google is developing Jarvis AI extension that can browse the web…

24 hours ago

Amazon Mulls New Multi-Billion Dollar Investment In Anthropic – Report

Amazon is reportedly in talks to pump billions of dollars more into AI start-up Anthropic,…

1 day ago

FTX’s Caroline Ellison Begins Her Two Year Prison Sentence

Star witness for the US prosecution of FTX founder Sam Bankman-Fried, has begun her two…

1 day ago

More Layoffs For iRobot Staff After Abandoned Amazon Deal

After axing 31 percent of its workforce when it failed to be acquired by Amazon,…

2 days ago

Mozilla Foundation Confirms Layoffs, Eliminates Advocacy Division

Mozilla Foundation axes 30 percent of its staff, and is eliminating its Advocacy Division that…

2 days ago

Google To Make MFA Mandatory Next Year

Improving security. Mandatory multi-factor authentication (MFA) is coming to the Google Cloud by the end…

2 days ago