![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Instead of getting all your video from the main web site you are viewing, you’ll get some from other users, and they’ll get some from you. This feature allows you to share your content with others, which, in some cases, can make video streaming more efficient. The Playback tab lets you enable peer-assisted networking. You should certainly prevent sites from doing this, unless you use a particular site that needs this functionality. The Camera and Mic preferences let you choose to have Flash ask if a site wants to use your camera or microphone or block these uses entirely. If you do block storage, and find that Flash doesn’t work correctly on some web sites, you can return to the preferences and enable it again for temporarily. You can also view all stored information, and delete it at will. On the Storage tab, you can chose to prevent sites from storing information – this storage is a type of “Flash cookie,” and you can prevent the Flash plug-in from storing these cookies by checking Block all sites from storing information on this computer, or you can have Flash ask you when a site wants to store cookies. These preferences offer four tabs: Storage, Camera and Mic, Playback and Advanced. (Before, you could only access them on a special page on the Adobe web site by loading a Flash object.) Open System Preferences (from the Apple menu), then click on the Flash Player icon in the Other section at the bottom of the window. Now, on Mac OS X, you can access Flash Player preferences from the System Preferences application. ![]() When Adobe updated Flash Player last week, they made a big change in the way the plug-in provides access to settings. Security & Privacy + Software & Apps Access Flash Player Preferences More Easily ![]()
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