If it's an intranet and you're loading data to flash from elsewhere it
may be an issue of data living on a different server to the flash and
there being crossdomain issues. If you have different intranet
addresses for flash content and database content such as
http://intranet/ and http://server2/ you will need either crossdomain
policy files, shim movies, or proxy files.

http://www.macromedia.com/cfusion/knowledgebase/index.cfm?id=tn_16520



On 8/1/05, Steve Onnis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I would say it would be more a browser permission issue where the IT guys
> are not letting activeX or Objects run on the browsers.
>  
> The only other way i know of is to tell the firewall to block specific
> content types from being delivered.
>  
> And yes i have found it to be an issue n larger corporations
>  
> Steve
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
> Ryan Sabir
> Sent: Monday, August 01, 2005 2:33 PM
> To: Flash Developers List
> Subject: [fugli] Flash and firewalls
> 
> Hiya,
>  
> I have a client complaining that some users can't use the Flash site we
> built for them. It seems that the users having problems have IT policies on
> their machines that are blocking communication from Flash to the server.
>  
> How common is this problem? Are there ways to develop database driven Flash
> content that doesn't upset local policies?
>  
> thanks...bye
>  
>  
>  ---
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