Download YouTube Videos as MP4 Files

This is kind of an interesting tip, courtesy of the Google Operating System blog:

An interesting side-effect of YouTube's recent push for higher quality videos is that most videos can be downloaded as MP4 files directly from YouTube. Until now, you could only get FLV files from your browser's cache or using one of the many websites that let you download YouTube videos. In fact, to download the MP4 files, you need to use the same URL like for FLV files and append "&fmt=18":

http://www.youtube.com/get_video?video_id=ID&t=SIGNATURE&fmt=18

ID is the video's identification value, SIGNATURE is a value that prevents you from downloading the file just by knowing the ID. You could create this URL by looking at the source code of a YouTube page, but it's much easier to automatically generate it.

One way is to save the following link as a bookmarklet by dragging it to your Links bar (in Firefox, Opera) or right-clicking and adding it to your favorites (in Internet Explorer)....

I wish all the online video sites would switch to MP4. There's nothing more useless than a FLV file. [Ponders that comment for a moment...]

Discuss this Article 5

daveinla
on Apr 14, 2008
That's a great tip ! Wow what a difference in quality ! I just wish that the same tip would work for videos in Picasaweb though... I tried as it is a Google site also, but didn't work ! :(
Waethorn
on Apr 14, 2008
wow. just wow. as if YouTube wasn't a bigger waste of time....now you can waste time on the go by loading them onto a PMP.
pthurrott
on Apr 14, 2008
Certainly most of YouTube is pretty useless. But that's true of the Web, or TV, or whatever, too. But... I have to say, there is some interesting stuff there, of course. Being able to save some of this stuff locally, in decent quality, is valuable.
Flenser
on Apr 14, 2008
Adobe Media Player plays FLVs quite well. (you can seek in them, which is something you can't do in Miro). Although if you have more than a few local files in it's Personal Files section it can get hard to find them unless you know the file name as there's no way to organise time.
JuryDuty
on Apr 14, 2008
Flenser--thanks for the tip on Abode Media Player. That plays FLV files perfectly, and no need to convert then unless I want to take them with me.

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