It's at the bottom of the drop-down menu. This icon is in the top-right corner of the window. Its app icon resembles a green, yellow, red, and blue sphere icon. Early Conextant audio drivers on Win10 were very problematic, but aside from that, driver-related stability issue would typically be limited to video or 3D content. Enabling Flash Player Download Article 1 Open Google Chrome. It's also possible that it's a driver thing.
This is definitely not a widespread issue on the radar at the moment.
Google has excellent telemetry, and is very fast to raise new issues like this in the field. Copy and paste, or post a screenshot of the Google Chrome, OS, and Flash Plugin fields, e.g.: if the Flash plugin version is not 26.0.0.131, go to Adobe Flash Player Install for all versions to download the latest version. The easiest approach is to just remove and reinstall Chrome.īased on the symptoms, I'm leaning towards a client-side problem - either a corrupted binary, or maybe a weird permission thing, like a group policy that's applied in your enterprise, which restricts access to required files or registry keys that we would assume normal access to. It will no longer be possible to enable Flash Player, via Enterprise policy (AllowOutdatedPlugins), in versions of Chrome before Chrome 88 on Windows, Mac. If the problem persists, there's a good chance the Flash Player included with Chrome was corrupted somehow. Click on 'Flash' and, where it says 'Block sites from running Flash (recommended)', toggle the switch on. Once you're there, scroll down until you see the option for Flash player: Scroll down to Flash, right below JavaScript Allow Flash to run. And the easiest way to get into Chrome's settings is by visiting chrome://settings/content. First things first, if you haven't rebooted since you started experiencing this issue, start there. As Chrome has its own built-in version of Flash, you don't need to install a plugin or anything.