

I have found the folder %TEMP%\WZSE0.TMP\, but I am being told the folder is empty. We can't troubleshoot why their software is attempting to install a 10 year old version of Flash Player ActiveX Control on a system it cannot install Flash Player on. I recommend going back to Lego for assistance. It's quite shocking that software released around November 2018 has bundled a version of Flash Player that was released 8 years prior. I don't know when setupldd-pc-4_3_11.exe was released, however, it's digital signature is dated November 24, 2017. I tried looking for LDD installation logs to troubleshoot, but couldn't find them. observed same behaviour you reported - LDD fails to install with the Flash Player error.Windows 10 Enterprise Version 1809 OS build 17763.379 - Lenovo P51 (physical machine).Windows 10 Pro Version 1803 OS build 17134.648 - Virtual Machine (host is the Lenovo P51 mentioned below).Windows 10 Home Version 1803 OS build 17134.648 - Virtual Machine (host is the Lenovo P51 mentioned below).I tested this on the following Windows 10 system:

Due to this, Microsoft considers Flash Player ActiveX Control a system component and locks the permissions on the file to prevent users from uninstalling it, or other programs from modifying it. As of Windows 8.x, Microsoft embeds Flash Player ActiveX Control in IE, and Edge on Windows 10, and all updates are released by Microsoft via Windows Update. Lego has included Flash Player ActiveX Control version 10.0.22.87 in their setupldd-pc-4_3_11.exe installer.įlash Player 10.0.22.87 was released in early 2009. This sounds like an issue with the LDD installer, not Flash Player.
