![]() That was the only thing I haven't tried, as I didn't even know a HTML5 trial existed. Very strange bug… I stumbled upon the solution because someone recommended to leave the HTML5 trial. Once you have (joined and) left the HTML5 trial all videos that used to say "This video is currently unavailable" should play fine. If you have already joined the HTML5 trial, simply Leave the HTML5 Trial.If you haven't already joined the HTML5 trial, you have to join it now! Also, try loading the video again… it probably won't, but to follow my steps 100%, you have to do it.If it doesn't, please read the UPDATE at the bottom of this post… Today, I found the solutions… more or less by accident, and the solution is VERY weird.Īs of recently, this may not work. In fact, I have started using Firefox for YouTube, because I was too lazy to find out how to fix this problem in Chrome, after the help page didn't help… Testing in Firefox, all videos played perfectly fine. I checked the flash player version, cleared the browser cache, all with no change. There is a link to a help page, but none of the tips solved the issue for me. The last couple of weeks I noticed that more and more YouTube videos would not play in Chrome with a message saying "This video is currently unavailable". I am guessing it will update just like any other package… time will tell. You will have the latest flash player installed, and it works perfectly fine (for me) with Firefox and Chrome. Since it is there, you don't need to download anything, just open your terminal and type: Seems that something has changed, and there is a package on launchpad called “adobe-flashplugin” package in Ubuntu: It's a bit weird as this stuff used to come with the browser (Chromium) and I never had to update the flash player itself, nor install it. ![]() This is not really a ubuntu flash player plugin update, but rather an installation of the flash player plugin. So I searched a bit more, and more, and more… and bingo, there is actually a package I can install via apt-get! rpm file in Ubuntu, I figured I missed something. rpm file I could download.Īs I rarely need to use an. However, when following the link in the warning, all I got offered was of some. Today YouTube and Facebook kept telling me that my flash player plugin is out of date and that I need to update. ![]()
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