Determine your Mac OS version. Click the Apple icon in the upper-left corner of your screen. Select About This Mac. The Mac OS version appears in the About This Mac dialog box Step 2.
Run the uninstaller applicable to your Mac OS version Note: Beginning with Flash Player 11.5, uninstalling the Flash Player resets the AutoUpdateDisable and SilentAutoUpdateEnable settings in mms.cfg to their default values, which are:. AutoUpdateDisable=0. SilentAutoUpdateEnable=0 If you are running the Flash Player uninstaller as part of your deployment process, redeploy any custom changes to either AutoUpdateDisable or SilentAutoUpdateEnable. When the uninstaller starts, click Uninstall.
Bookmark or print this page so that you can use the rest of these instructions after you close your browser. To close all browsers, either click the browser name in the Uninstaller dialog box, or close each browser manually and then click Retry. Note: Do not click Quit in the Uninstaller window. It stops the uninstallation process. After you close the browsers, the uninstaller continues automatically until the uninstallation is complete. When you see the message notifying you that the uninstallation succeeded, click Done.
Delete the following directories.
Ugh, another Flash exploit?! That Adobe has confirmed “a major security vulnerability that affects all versions of Flash for Windows, Mac, and Linux.” Adobe says this vulnerability is being used by hackers, although for very targeted attacks—phishing, in other words. “Successful exploitation could cause a crash and potentially allow an attacker to take control of the affected system,”. Well, that’s just great., which discovered the flaw, says that targets are receiving phishing emails with URLs that look like news articles, sent to “several foreign affairs ministries from around the globe.” I don’t work for a foreign affairs ministry and you might not either, but nothing is stopping other hackers from taking advantage of the same flaw.
We all like to think we’re smart enough to avoid phishing scams—and I’m sure you are! And we’d like to think Adobe will get this patched soon—the company says it hopes to do that next week. But if you really want to be safe from this flaw, and the next, and the next, and the next, there’s one foolproof step you can take: Uninstall Flash. How to uninstall Flash To get Flash off of your Mac for good, you’ll need. There are distinct versions for OS X 10.6 and later, for 10.4 and 10.5, and even one for 10.1 to 10.3. Find the uninstaller for the version of OS X that you have.
(If you aren’t sure, just click the Apple logo in your menu bar and select About This Mac. The popup window will say.) Click its link to download it to your Downloads folder.
For example, Adobe offers a separate uninstaller app you need to download and run to uninstall Flash on a Mac. RELATED: How to Uninstall Java on Mac OS X. Oracle is even worse and doesn’t provide an easy app that will uninstall Java from Mac OS X for you. Re: unable to uninstall Flash player on Mac OS X 10.11 maria__ Jun 10, 2016 11:01 AM ( in response to nickdickins56 ) the uninstaller is available now.
When you launch the uninstaller from your Downloads folder, it runs, and you have to click Uninstall. Just in case you launched the uninstaller but didn’t want to uninstall anything, I guess. After you enter your account password, you’re prompted to close all your browsers. The uninstaller can do that, or you can quit them yourself.
![Uninstaller Uninstaller](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125449493/938008651.png)
The uninstaller will do its thing and let you know when it’s done. Once it’s finished, Adobe recommends you delete a couple of folders from your Library too. To open your home directory’s Library folder, go to the Finder, click Go in the menu bar, and then hold down the Option key to make the Library folder appear in the drop-down menu. Open it, and then find and destroy these two folders: /Library/Preferences/Macromedia/Flash Player /Library/Caches/Adobe/Flash Player (Note that Adobe’s instructions don’t include deleting those folders if you are running Mac OS 10.1 to 10.3. Most of you are probably on 10.4 Tiger at least by now.) If you want to make sure it’s really gone, go to page and click the Check Now button to check if it’s on your computer. If you ever want to get Flash again, just.
It’s a terrible idea to get it anywhere else. Do you use Flash, or have you kicked it to the curb once and for all? Sound off in the comments!