

Control Flash Video Playback in Chromeįlash videos are disabled by default in Chrome (the browser will ask if you want to play the video first). Select the last option to block autoplay, at least as long as you don’t interact with the web page. Document user activation is required – Video starts autoplaying as soon as you click or interact with the web page.User gesture is required for cross-origin iframes – Autoplay is enabled for videos that aren’t hosted on other sites (linking to YouTube, for example).No user gesture is required – Autoplay is enabled.Click the dropdown next to Autoplay policy, and you’ll see four options: In your Chrome address bar, type chrome://flags/#autoplay-policyĢ. If you still want to block autoplay even when these criteria are met, you need to do the following:ġ. It will autoplay videos so long as their sound is muted if you click on the page somewhere or if you’ve frequently played media on that site before. So right now, Chrome isn’t too strict on autoplaying videos. They talked earlier in the year about implementing stricter autoplay policies, but then they rolled back the policy after HTML5 indie game devs complained that these policies had a terrible impact on their income.

Disable Video Autoplay in ChromeĬhrome’s autoplay policies have been going through a lot of changes of late, and it’s a little bit confusing now to know where they’re at exactly. We’ll show you how in the following guide.
