You can find details on how to locate and interpret the installation log files at Troubleshoot Adobe Creative Suite install issues with log files. Operating Systems and the CC Cleaner Tool have both received updates in the last three years. If you receive any additional installation errors can you please update this discussion? The discussions you continue to respond to are from 2013. Once the damaged files have been removed it should the be possible to reinstall Photoshop CS6 and the available updates successfully. Please make sure to run the uninstallers first as the CC Cleaner Tool is only designed to remove critical entries not replace the use of the uninstaller. You can find details on the use of the CC Cleaner tool at Use the Adobe Creative Cloud Cleaner Tool to solve installation problems. I would recommend running any available Adobe uninstallers followed by the use of the CC Cleaner Tool. Listulda from the error you posted in the installation log at Re: Photoshop CS6 Update Fails it appears that your current installation has become damaged and is no longer able to be replaced or removed. I do start fresh each year and would like to clone an updated PS CS6, so I don't have to deal with this anymore. Maybe Adobe sold me a defective PS CS6, but the error log points to installation problems, not the software. PS: I am an advanced computer user and I tried everything I could find on the net, nothing works. Not everybody has money to pay each year for the CC version and we would like to get what we paid for, a properly updated perpetual version.
Adobe ignores this problem for three years now, no new fixes were offered to the perpetual PS CS6 users. the problem is there and not even the direct download works. It is not possible to update it anymore, no matter how many times I reinstall, uninstall, install over. I used to be able to update it the first year while not using Creative Cloud.
People are still having issues not being able to update their perpetual PS CS6.
That is correct however, the problem persists for three years and has not been resolved by Adobe yet.