If the domain is listed in your video settings page, but the error is still appearing, the domain specified in your address bar may be different from the domain sent to the Vimeo player. In these cases, a privacy error may appear. Contact a web developer to confirm if there is anything in your site's HTML code that could be blocking the referrer from reaching our player iframe.

Linux users: If you are seeing an unsupported error in the player on Ubuntu (and some other Linux operating systems), try installing these packages: Chromium-codecs-ffmpeg-extra (for Chromium), or streamer0.10-plugins-good and Streamer0.10-ffmpeg (for Firefox)


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If you continue to see the unsupported error in the player on Linux (for every video), please contact your OS community for assistance with installing the necessary packages for h.264/ HTML5 playback.

This error can appear when your browser fails to fetch media for reasons that are usually unknown. Not to worry-- a quick refresh of the player (or web page containing the player) should immediately fix the problem.

Just wanted to thank you. I started having a similar problem--iPad Air would not play any videos (not YouTube, not Vimeo) in Chrome or Safari, which meant that I could no longer use the iPad for my MOOCs. Found this post and things seem to be working now.

Some people using Mac Safari or Google Chrome will see an error message when accessing Kaltura pages in Canvas. The message states: It seems your browser is blocking 3rd party session cookies which are required for the Kaltura application. To resolve this issue, please update your settings to allow 3rd party cookies.

DuckDuckGo is a free web browser search extension does not collect search history and blocks many types of tracker scripts. Unfortunately , since the Kaltura media player tracks students watching videos in order to collect analytics, DuckDuckGo will block the Kaltura media player. The solution is to uninstall DuckDuckGo web extension.

When video files are created, they can be compressed to make the file size smaller by using a program (or compressor) that is installed on the developer's computer. When you play the video file, your computer must have a decompressor installed that can read that particular compression format. This program is called a codec. 


When you try to play a file that uses a codec that is not installed on your computer, the Windows Media Player tries to download the codec from a Microsoft server. If the codec is available, the Windows Media Player installs it on your computer and then plays the file. However, if the codec is not available on the server (for example, because the codec was not created by Microsoft), the Windows Media Player displays a message that your computer is missing a codec.


In some cases, the file that you want to play uses a codec that is not available or compatible with the Windows Media Player. When that happens, you might be unable to use Windows Media Player to play this particular .avi file.

To resolve this problem, locate and download the required codec. 


Before you start, you must know which version of Windows your computer is running. To determine which version of Windows that you are running. To verify that you are logged on to Windows with a user account that is a computer administrator, visit the following Microsoft Web site:

In some cases, the error message in Windows Media Player will provide information about the codec file that is required. The error message might also provide a link that you can click to download the codec file. Therefore, to resolve the problem, play the .avi file and check the error message in Windows Media Player for help.


To resolve this problem, follow these steps.

Click Web Help to display information about the missing codec and the corresponding link, if the codec is available to download.


Note If the link to the codec is not available, try searching the Internet for that particular codec to find where it is available. If you cannot determine which codec you must have or you cannot locate it, the codec might not be available. Or, it might not be compatible with the Windows Media Player. Therefore, you might be unable to use the Windows Media Player to play this particular.avi file.

In some cases, the error message in Windows Media Player will provide information about which codec file that is required. The error message might also provide a link that you can click to download the codec file. Therefore, to resolve the problem, play the .avi file and check the error message in Windows Media Player for help.


To resolve this problem, follow these steps.

Click Web Help to display information about the missing codec and the corresponding link, if the codec is available to download.


Note If the link to the codec is not available, try searching the Internet for that particular codec to find where it is available. If you cannot determine which codec you must have or you cannot locate it, the codec might not be available. Or, it might not be compatible with the Windows Media Player. Therefore, you might be unable to use the Windows Media Player to play this particular .avi file.

When you receive the error message, check for the FourCC identifier. If the FourCC identifier is available, note it. The four characters following the "vids:" or "vidc:" is the unique FourCC identifier that you can use to find the codec for this particular .avi file. 


For example, if the string is "vids:vcr2", "vcr2" is the FourCC identifier.


Note If the FourCC identifier is not listed in the error message, unfortunately you cannot use Windows Media Player to play this particular .avi file.

Use the FourCC identifier to find the manufacturer that created the codec. In step 3 for example, the FourCC identifier was "vcr2". Therefore, search for "vcr2" in the FOURCC column to find the codec and manufacturer. In this example, you will notice that "ATI Video Codec 2" is listed as the name of the codec and "ATI Technologies" is listed as the owner (or manufacturer).


If you cannot find the codec or manufacturer listed, you might try searching for the codec and manufacturer on the Internet by using the FourCC identifier.


Note Be aware that not all manufacturers provide their codecs for you to download. If you cannot obtain the required codec from the manufacturer, you will be unable to use the Windows Media Player to play this particular .avi file.

Be aware that .avi files can contain several different audio or video formats. To play an .avi file, you must use the .avi file player and the relevant codec file to decompress the .avi file. For more information, click the following article numbers to view the articles in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

It might be possible that the media player on your Android phone does not support the video codec you are trying to play. Install a compatible video player like a VLC player, BS Player, or MX Player from the Google Play store.

Hi Arsenio,

 Thank you for sharing your experience with us. We are glad to hear that resetting app preferences helped resolve the issue of videos not playing on your Huawei P30 Pro from the Gallery app. We appreciate your kind words and are happy to know that our article was helpful to you.

 We are sorry to hear that Huawei was unable to help you with the issue. Sometimes, these issues can be tricky to diagnose, and it is always good to have multiple solutions to try.

This error message means that you are not using the primary console for the Nintendo Account that purchased the game. On a non-primary console, the game can only be started by the player that owns the game. The solution depends on who originally purchased the game.

If you can't find a record of the purchase, it is likely that the game belongs to someone who no longer uses this system (previous owner, visiting friend, etc). You will need to use your own Nintendo Account on your system to purchase the game for your console.

There are different devices with different personalization settings out there so there is no one for all fix to this. You'd need to go and set us user preferences for each of those social media apps you use so that they don't play sound automatically. Muting notifications can also help on some devices.

Because of this we cannot provide a timeframe for a fix, but will make sure to pass on this information to our developers to keep working on the app's optimization. In the meantime please make sure to keep your app up to date so you don't miss any important fixes or features.

If the user did not tell Spotify to stop, it should NOT stop, under absolutely ANY circumstances. It is doing something the user did not tell it to and that is a major issue. End of.


It makes it a non-starter to choose to use Spotify while doing anything else on the phone (harming their end too). You have to keep a better player around that does not have this monumental use-stopper of a problem, and use that instead of Spotify, just because of this "behaviour".


Just while posting this, my music (I am using Spotify for a specific playlist today) has stopped 5 times because I had to go to Slack and WhatsApp for stuff. This is stuff that isn't even using audio, to boot. Inexcusable. I wonder if Apple or Tidal have the same problem, because GoneMad with my own files sure doesn't.

Thanks but that's just not true. Other players have an option to ignore audiofocus requests and will play through, no matter what. As they should by default anyway. Separate options for calls and other requests, too.


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