


There are Adobe test pages for each so you want to make sure that AFP succeeds and the other ASP fails to play. To disable the built-in Flash plug-in for Internet Explorer on modern versions of Windows, open Internet Explorer, click the gear menu, and select 'Manage add-ons.' Click the Show box and select 'All add-ons.' Locate 'Shockwave Flash Object' under 'MIcrosoft Windows Third Party Application Component,' select it, and click the Disable button. If this is accurate can someone get Firefox to name things correctly, AND if article is accurate let this be a warning to others that they NOT use ASP, but as needed rely on AFP. Adobe Shockwave Player (formerly known as Macromedia Shockwave Player) is a plug-in for all popular browsers that. My Firefox is working, but this confusion of calling things by their proper (or at least a unique name) seems crazy to me. Mozilla Firefox users should note that the presence of the “Shockwave Flash” plugin listed in the Firefox Add-ons section denotes an installation of Adobe Flash Player plugin - not Adobe Shockwave Player. According to this security alert web article ASP is far less secure than AFP which itself isn't great.

Adobe various websites and now seemingly Firefox seem to continually confuse and obscure things regarding the two different Adobe Players (Adobe Flash Player AFP and Adobe Shockwave Player ASP).
