Right click on file and select "rename" And replace the extension part with ". Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Collectives on Stack Overflow. Learn more. How to force Chrome to open local video files in-browser instead of "downloading" them?
Ask Question. Asked 1 year ago. Active 10 months ago. Viewed 1k times. Add a comment. Active Oldest Votes. Vikrant Panjiyar Vikrant Panjiyar 1 1 1 bronze badge. I'll wait for any response from the Support wrote to them , so maybe there will be any feedback.
Looking on the net, if this did work fine in Chrome and Opera before, it's most likely due to changes Chromium made with the handling of flash. To check, download the Opera 48 setup file , launch it, click "options", set "install path" to a folder on your desktop, set "install for" to "Standalone Installation USB " and install.
When that Opera opens up, immediately close it. Go into the Opera folder on your desktop and in the version folder, rename the opera autoupdate exe so that Opera doesn't update to 49 on you. Swfs not opening, downloading instead. Reply Reply as topic. This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it. A Former User last edited by leocg Twenty minutes ago I tried to play a music. Any idea, any help? Reply Quote 0 1 Reply Last reply. A Former User sgunhouse last edited by sgunhouse As I said, it worked perfectly just 5 days ago.
A Former User Guest last edited by kuna I'm having the same problem, started after the latest Windows 7 security update four days ago. A Former User last edited by By the way, the whole game works perfectly without any problems, it's the files alone, which don't want to play. A Former User last edited by I have same issue, haven't managed to find anything helpful to fix it.
Connect and share knowledge within a single location that is structured and easy to search. If you attempt to visit the URL of a raw SWF file, Chrome 57 refuses to display and instead asks if you want to download, with the warning "This type of file can harm your computer". However, if you wrap the same SWF in a simple web page with an object tag, it loads normally. This behavior is apparently related to how Flash Player is a click-to-enable feature in Chrome now Chrome Help forum discussion on this behavior.
If you visit a SWF directly, it will not ask you to click-to-run, it will simply download it instead. The fact it will not prompt you to enable it does not seem to be a security decision. Imagine there was a website, say an old forum, which allows you to upload an avatar. It is expected you will upload an image file, but the file type checking is poor, and an attacker uploads a malicious SWF file instead, to perform an XSS attack on the site admins. Now, the HTML being generated for this avatar, might look something like this:.
Of course, such a risk is not unique to Flash Player. Sign up to join this community. The best answers are voted up and rise to the top. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Learn more.
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