All rights reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Cookies. Creative Cloud. Premiere Pro. After Effects. See all. See plans for: businesses photographers students. Document Cloud. Acrobat DC. Marketing Cloud. Audience Manager.
Experience Manager. Media Optimizer. Adobe for enterprise. Acrobat Reader DC. Adobe Flash Player. Adobe AIR. Adobe Shockwave Player. All products. Students and Teachers. Schools and Universities. Get Support. To manage or deactivate these licenses, use the Protected Content Playback Settings panel. A website that serves audio and video to your computer can deliver the content with better performance if users who are playing the same content share their bandwidth.
Sharing bandwidth allows the audio or video to play more smoothly, without skips or pauses from buffering.
This is called peer-assisted networking, since peers on the network assist each other to provide a better experience. Flash Player only shares bandwidth using peer-assisted networking with your permission. If you enable this option, you are not agreeing to share your bandwidth whenever an application wants to use it.
You are only allowing applications to ask you whether you want to share your bandwidth. In most cases, you want to share your bandwidth only when you are using a high-speed Internet connection. Note that sharing your bandwidth increases the amount of data your network provider delivers to your device. If you pay a flat monthly fee for unlimited network data, using peer-assisted networking won't increase your monthly bill.
However, if you pay for a limited amount of data or are unsure how you are charged for network usage, you probably want to disable peer-assisted networking.
If you do so, you will never be asked whether you want to share your bandwidth. To specify whether or not to use peer-assisted networking, use the Peer-Assisted Networking panel. You may be aware that some websites work together with your browser to store small amounts of data, called cookies, on your computer for their own use in the future.
For example, when you go to a website regularly, it may welcome you by name; your name is probably stored in a cookie, and you can use browser options to determine whether you want cookies or not. You may also have specified in your browser that pages you visit can take up only a certain amount of disk space. That is, even if you have specified in your browser settings that you do not want cookies placed on your computer, you may be asked if an application that runs in Flash Player can store information.
This happens because the information stored by Flash Player is not the same as a cookie; it is used only by the application and has no relation to any other Internet privacy or security settings you may have set in your browser. Similarly, the amount of disk space you let the application use has no relation to the amount of disk space you have allotted for stored pages in your browser.
That is, when SWF or FLV content is being played, the amount of disk space you allow here is in addition to any space your browser is using for stored pages. No matter how you may have configured your browser, you still have the option to allow or deny the application that runs in Flash Player permission to store the information and to specify how much disk space the stored information can occupy.
All rights reserved. Terms of Use Privacy Cookies. Creative Cloud. Premiere Pro. After Effects. See all. See plans for: businesses photographers students. Document Cloud. Acrobat DC. Marketing Cloud. Audience Manager. Experience Manager. Media Optimizer. Adobe for enterprise. Acrobat Reader DC.
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