While conducting some testing of this great applicaiton, I came across an item that may need addressed.
As we know, Adobe Flash Player(AFP) is a well used method for streaming video to users.
Mtv, News, etc etc all use it.
CCleaner addresses the AFP application artifacts created in;
<drive>:\Documents and Settings\<userprofile>\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\macromedia.com\support\flashplayer\sys and
<drive>:\Documents and Settings\<userprofile>\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\#SharedObjects
But what I found recently is that AFP appends web site url hosts(domains) that were visited, ether typed/clicked or via popups, to the settings.sol file in <drive>:\Documents and Settings\<userprofile>\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\macromedia.com\support\flashplayer\sys.
This file is not deleted by CCleaner. The decision may be intentional because this file may hold user defined setting from the Setting Manager(http://www.macromedia.com/support/documentation/en/flashplayer/help/settings_manager05.html).
But forensically or on the premise that this applicatoin cleans trace information, these url hosts should be removed.
If you would like to verify this artifact, just open your Adobe Flash Settings Manager, http://www.macromedia.com/support/document..._manager05.html, now or after a CClean.
Go to the "Website Storage Settings" or "Website Privacy Settings" tab, last two tabs.
If you see anything listed here, then sorry... GotYa.
You can also just open <drive>:\Documents and Settings\<userprofile>\Application Data\Macromedia\Flash Player\macromedia.com\support\flashplayer\sys\settings.sol file with a text editor and get an idea of what is going on.
Myself, if you could add this file for deletion to the default CCleaner analyser I would be happy, the file is recreated by AFP with default settings so no worries.
Or open the file and remove the 'domains' section, save and then cleanup cluster slack for that file, but I would imagine this would be much more coding.
Thanks
JimG