Hiwh7789565
According to the screenshot, you have the following versions of Flash Player installed:
- Flash Player ActiveX Control (for IE) version 22.0.0.192 - this is was released almost a year ago on June 6, 2016
- Flash Player NPAPI (for Firefox) version 25.0.0.171 - this is the current version, for all browsers
- Flash Player PPAPI (for Chromium-based browsers) version 24.0.0.221 - this was released February 14, 2017
The update notifications you're getting is going to be for Flash Player ActiveX Control and PPAPI, which are out-dated. If you do not use these, it's best to uninstall them so that you do not have versions with known security vulnerabilities installed on your system. To uninstall just the ActiveX Control and PPAPI plugin do the following:
- Go to Control Panel > All Control Panel Items > Programs and Features
- Look for Adobe Flash Player 22 ActiveX
- Select this item, right-click and click uninstall
- Alternatively, click the uninstall link at the top of the list of installed programs
- Look for Adobe Flash Player 24 PPAPI
- Select this item, right-click and click uninstall
- Alternatively, click the uninstall link at the top of the list of installed programs
- Flash Player ActiveX Control and PPAPI plugin are now removed from the system, leaving only Flash Player NPAPI plugin for Firefox
Note that Flash Player's normal release cycle is the second Tuesday of the month (Patch Tuesday), therefore, every month there is a new version. The best way to keep Flash Player up-to-date on a system is to opt-into background Updates. This is the 'Allow Adobe to install updates (recommended) option in the Flash Player Settings Manager (the window in the screenshot provided). When a system is opted into Background Updates, Flash Player checks for an update once per day, in the background. When an update is available it is installed, silently in the background, with no user interaction. Since a check is made once per day, systems opted into Background Updates are generally updated within 24 hours of a new version being available, assuming the system has an active internet connection. If more than one player type is installed on the system (e.g. ActiveX Control, NPAPI, and PPAPI), all player types are updated within 3 hours.
Systems opted into Notification Updates, which is what you have selected, checks for an update once every 7 days. If an update is encountered, a registry entry is created to announce the update the next the user logs in (either from a system reboot, or log off/on). Notification Updates only update one player type at a time. This being whichever player type checked for an update. So, it's very possible to have old versions of Flash Player on the system when opted into Notification Updates, especially if only one browser is used predominately over other browsers.
--
Maria