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I was shown a UAC prompt while working asking me if I wanted to allow Adobe Flash to run.

(Looked identical to the first screen shot here: https://forums.adobe.com/message/4563117 )

Trouble is, I don't actually have Adobe Flash installed (or Adobe Reader for that matter). I use Chrome for both Flash and PDF content so I don't need either. (I answered No as I figured no good could come from allowing it to run.)

Where did the UAC prompt come from? Using Process Explorer, I found the process was called consent.exe but the trail went cold from there.

Is there a way to find out if I do actually have Adobe Flash installed? There's nothing named Adobe in either Program Files folders nor in the Control Panel list.

Any ideas please?

UPDATE: I've gone through the list of software I have installed, searching for ___ installs Adobe Flash and found Skype as a possible culprit.

As the UAC prompt only happens once a day, is there any way I can confirm if this is the case?

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  • Only two possible explanations exists. You either actually do have it installed or what you see is actually a fake "flash update". "I found the process was called consent.exe but the trail went cold from there." based on this fact alone its a fake update.
    – Ramhound
    Nov 13, 2014 at 19:44

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If it was just one time and you don't know how to trigger it, it's gonna be difficult to discern where it came from.

Anyway, I'd suggest you take a look at Sysinternals' Autoruns - you might find some reg keys in 'Run'.
Also, check out your scheduled tasks (I don't remember if Autoruns show them).

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