just got that a few minutes ago; never had such a prompt in the past. Not even sure that really came from Adobe… well it should. Anyway I can hardly explain it. All my adobe programs are up to date, flash player and reader included. See screen shot. I attempted to load the same pdf again and didn’t have the prompt again. Here’s the link, picked up on another forum:
hxxp://docs.house.gov/rules/health/111_ahcaa.pdf
I dismisses the install of anything (realizing I should have closed the browser instead of clicking “no” : ) … anyway, I cleaned my temp files, rebooted, quic scanned with MBAM and it seems there’s nothing. Or could the alert just be related to the certificate in the pdf, and prompted me to change automatically the restrictions in reader?
ps: off topic here for weeks now FF 3.6 plugin update page is prompting me to update shockwave for director and my version is already the latest one : … also, anyone knows why Firefox keeps calling flash player plugin “shockwave flash” ???
I avoid opening .pdf files in the browser as this is one area that can be exploited. I download the .pdf and then open it directly with my pdf reader, also FoxIt PDF reader.
So your notice from FF may recognise the adobe plug-in has a security update and displaying the notice ???
there’s no update (Adobe reader), checked already before posting this thread
Also, as I added as ps in my first post, there’s a bug with the “shockwave plugin” in FF checking process, I just posted about it @ MozillaZine and someone told me that was a known bug https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=546727
I can’t say that this service is reliable. I used it and was told that my Shockwave plug-in needs updating. But when I visited Shocwave’s site and compared the latest version’s number with the version number in my Firefox, I saw that my version is already the latest.
I’m having a different but similar problem with Adobe/Avast nad it is almost certainly due to Avast. I’m a Vista user and whenever I open Internet Explorer I get a message something about updating Adobe, yes or no. I click “no” and the message reappears. Clicking “no” doesn’t get rid of it except for a few seconds. There also is a box “Do not show this message again.” I click that, and the message continues to appear. I click “yes” thinking that the nag will go away, and the message continues. It will eventually quit but then reappears the next time that I start IE.
The reason that I strongly suspect Avast is that is the only thing that I have changed on my computer. I’m a first-time user of Avast (discontinued McAfee). I came to this forum hoping for an answer and find from searching Avast AND Adobe that there have been several problems with this association. If I can’t find a solution then I’ll be forced to uninstall Avast and try to reset my computer to a restore point prior to the installation.
@ lbeck: that’s an old thread, you should have started a new one; okay doesn’t matter anyway the prompt that you got seems similar to the one I had. I still have no idea where it came from. How can you relate that to Avast ??? It’s not avast related at all; there must be something wrong going on between Adobe and IE add-ons interface.
Whatever it is, I didn’t have that problem again for ages, probably because both Adobe reader and flash player have been updated to new versions in the mean time. The fact that you see it happen now that you installed Avast is hazard. Avast doesn’t interfere with these sort of things, doesn’t make sense. Check your Adobe versions and update if necessary. Hope that helps.
Thanks to both of you. Sorry to post on an old thread but my typical protocol is to do a search and if there is a similar problem to hitch onto that thread rather than to start a new one.
I agree that it could possibly be a coincidence that the Adobe nag began the moment that I installed Avast, but I use IE all the time and never saw the nag until the moment that I installed Avast. Also, my search on this forum for adobe produced quite a few returns, so I assumed that there must be some ongoing conflict with Avast.
What I’ll do:
I’ll start a new thread with screen capture if I continue to have the problem
I’ll do as suggested and make sure that I have the latest from Adobe (even though checking the “yes” to install didn’t install anything or remove the nag)
As already suggested to you, your problem is not Avast-related. Check for insecure software applications with http://secunia.com/vulnerability_scanning/personal/ to update insecure applications. A lot of us use this regularly to keep our software up to date and more secure.