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"Activity window" in Safari no longer works to download YouTube videos. Why not? Workaround?

For years I have used Apple's recommended standard technique whenever I wanted to download a Flash video embedded in a YouTube page to my hard drive:


- Open a YouTube page and click on the video's "play" button to get it started;

- Press command-option-A to then open up Safari's "Activity Window" which lists all the components of the page;

- Find on the list the component for the loading Flash video, which is usually much larger (measured in MB rather than KB) than all the other components, and also is usually still in the process of loading, so it's easy to spot;

- Double-click the component's name on the list in the Activity Window, and voila, the video downloads to my hard drive.


This "trick" is described everywhere as THE standard way to download YouTube videos (and similar page components); and I have used it successfully for many years.


HOWEVER, sometime very recently (not sure when, exactly -- a few weeks or months ago) YouTube has changed the way its pages are coded, so that this technique no longer works. When I open the Activity Window, instead of seeing one large loading video file that's easily identifiable, I see a whole series of large files, all exactly 1.7mb big (no matter how large the file size of the actual video in question is), and they constantly increase in number -- at first there are two such files, but over the seconds and minutes more and more appear. Furthermore, many files with no named size are constantly loading and then disappearing. And here's the whole point: I've tried double-clicking on ALL of these files, dozens of ways on dozens of YouTube pages, and none of the are the video file I seek and none of them cause the file to download to my hard drive.


If I click on one the mysterious 1.7mb components, I indeed get a ".flv" downloaded to my hard drive, but it's not actually a Flash video; clicking on its downloaded file icon just brings up a blank box or an error message saying that it's not really a video file at all. I think it's some sort of "decoy" file or something to do with streaming Flash code.


To see what I mean, just go to YouTube, load any random video page, and then open Safari's Activity WIndow and try to download the video that way.


This happens on an iMac running Safari 5.1 on OSX 10.6.8, and also on a MacBook Pro running Safari 5.0.2 on OSX 10.6.5, and on a few other new-ish Macs I tested it out on, but failed to note their version numbers.


I'm presuming that this problem is not specific to my computer, but is caused by the way that YouTube altered the background code for their pages. I don't know if the glitch is an intentional attempt by YouTube to prevent downloads, or if it is an accidental "bug" of the new code. Either way:


How can I fix the problem? Is there some other lesser-known built-in way for Safari/Mac to download the new kind of YouTube videos? Or is there some reliable freeware or shareware or plug-in or extension or whatever for Safari that would enable YouTube downloading?


I tried a freeware program called "Evom" that was highly touted, but it too was thwarted by the new YouTube code and failed to extract any videos from the YouTube page, even though that's what the application was designed to do.


As a side note, I will say that I also have (though rarely use) FireFox for Mac, and the "Unplug" plug-in installed on it, and that ALSO "broke" recently and no longer has the capacity to recognize or download YouTube videos, even though previously it worked fine. This is why I think the issue is not specific to my set-up or computer, but is due to a change in YouTube's underlying code.)


Any help with an explanation, solution or workaround would be much appreciated (by me and by millions of others who I assume are facing the same problem!).

15" MacBookPro, Mac OS X (10.6.5)

Posted on May 8, 2012 11:09 AM

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Question marked as Best reply

Posted on May 8, 2012 11:20 AM

Hi..


Go to ~/Library/Safari


Move these files from the Ssfari folder to the Trash.


Downloads.plist


LastSession.plist


History.plist



Now go to ~/Library/Caches/com.apple.Safari/Cache.db


Move the Cache.db file to the Trash.


Quit then relaunch Safari to test.

100 replies

Oct 9, 2012 2:10 PM in response to Zenobius

Johnny didn't say I had to right click. He just said, "It appears in the Drop Down Menu when you click on the "i"", and that's all I saw in the other posts about it. That it would just appear in the Drop Down Menu


Thanks for the tip- that makes perfect sense now that I know this. That's the thing I've found with so much stuff on Apple- it's not a matter of it making sense. It ALWAYS makes sense once I know the answer. It's just a matter of knowing what to do or EXACTLY where to look. As a former Windows user, I have found that many long time Apple users take for granted that we know all the steps in between that get skipped in "step by step" instructions that are not truly step by step.

Oct 13, 2012 6:32 PM in response to Dimaxum

Thanks Dimaxum!!


I've tried the numerous other suggestions on this thread and still couldn't DL Youtube Videos like I used to in Safari 5.


Finally tried your method (Wondershare YouTube Free Downloader software) and it JUST WORKED! (After I sorted out the Pacifier Install madness) Cool. One problem I am noticing on Safari is that about 50% of the time I open a Youtube page the video refuses to play. Another thing I have noticed is that if I go full screen in Safari (with HTML5 YouTube videos) when I hit Escape to return to normal screen it crashes Safari 100% of the time. I regualrly cut and paste URLs from Safari to CHrome or FF for these reasons (boring).


I would use Chrome as primary browser but I don't like it as much in some other respects (can't move 1Password icon for one and it's bookmark menus are ugly for another)


Anyhow thanks heaps your solution has ended my hours long quest to save a 3min video :-)


One question. What format is the video saved by Free Downloader encoded in? The only app that will open it is MPlayer. The extension is MP4 but neither QT player 7 or X, nor compressor will open the video, I doubt it is .mp4. I have the Perian extension loaded too. I'l consider there not-free Converter I guess but it seems strange to be calling it MP4 when .mp4 players don't like the files.

Oct 20, 2012 8:04 PM in response to wideEyedPupil

I've been using Wondershare for over a year now and loved it until it stopped working and I've been too busy to figure out why. When it did work I would drag the videos into a freebee called FLV Crunch and that woudl convert the files to the format I needed. I'm amazed you got WOndershare to work BC Ive been trying to do that all week. The answers at the company are deadends but I highly recommend crunch. It's been put to the test, and it produces a real MP4. Something though I've noticed is that for use later on in my Iphone I had to run another conversion for Ipod/phone using handbrake. Another Freebee. They regularly update with an option to convert for use on various models of phone.

Oct 21, 2012 7:48 AM in response to Tuffy Nicolas

Those who are using Safari 6 to download Youtube videos can still manage without the Activity window; it just takes a couple of extra steps. First, you must make sure to turn on the Web Developer by going to Preferences, the Advanced tab, then click on Show Develop menu in menu bar. Navigate to the Youtube page you are interested in select the desired video resolution. Under the Develop menu, click on Show Web Inspector (or type Alt-Command-I). In the resource pane you should see a series of folders such as Frames, Images, etc. Click on Other, then navigate to the videoplayback -- rX--- entry, where X is a number. If your video is large, you may see a circular download progress indicator working to the right of the entry. When it is finished downloading, look in the right pane under Location, and you should see an entry Full URL. In my case it says something like http://r3---xo-ord1.c.youtube.com/videoplayback? followed by a series of letters. Copy the entire URL. Then open your downloads window (the down arrow tab that appears in the upper right of your browser after you have downloaded a file) and paste the url with Command-V. Voila, it works! I found this by trial and error, so I thought I would post the results here.

Oct 21, 2012 8:17 AM in response to lawlis

Simple question.


WHY take 75 steps to download a flash video... when all you need to do is use 1 simple extension?


I stay subscribed to this discussion mainly for the laughs.


It's like going through terminal typing out commands... instead of using the mouse/trackpad to change your desktop background in preferences. it can be done both ways, one is easy the other complex...

and yes, I have seen people suggest "tips" that use the terminal instead of preference pane, or even instead of right clicking... Just amazes me people think up complex ways to do something so simple.


I see a flash video i want to download?

I right click and download video. done in 1 or 2 steps depending where the video is.


@wideyedpupil

quicktime was changed with Lion. if the AAC audio is not in the "correct" track it won't play in quicktime, but every other player WILL play it.


https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3255009?start=0&tstart=0

2nd responce by richard90


Handbrake, or Miro video converter. both free, Miro is faster if an mp4 just needs the Audio track adjusted, takes like 30 seconds to *fix* a 12 minute video.

Jan 14, 2013 5:04 AM in response to JannaB

Hi, I followed your video on youtube but when I try to open the video in another window it just downloads a file after having opend a blank window. This file can not be opened with quick time. I have tried making the video pop out and then downloading via the other the source but again this file can not be opened with quick time. Any ideas?

Jan 16, 2013 5:49 AM in response to Sorclive

Sorclive like Johnnyjohnny2 and Zenobius said on page 5.....


THIS IS HOW TO DO IT!!


1) Use Safari and go to YOUTUBE5 SAFARI EXTENSION at this link--->> http://www.verticalforest.com/2010/10/27/youtube5-version-2/ Or just google youtube5


2) download the extension and open it, 2 seconds later, your youtube video player changes into awesomely easy to download player.


3) IN THE YOUTUBE video you want to download, click on the "I" for info button in the upper right corner


4) the dropdown gives you the 720, 360, etc.... Right click on the resolution you want, make sure you "Right Click" on the resolution you want to bring up another drop down window will appear ANNNNDDDD!!!


5) THE DROPDOWN MENU SAYS: "DOWNLOAD LINKED FILE" or "DOWNLOAD LINKED FILE AS" choose one


THATS IT THATS IT THATS IT!!!


Enjoy my friend

May 15, 2013 6:49 PM in response to William Stanton

Hi guys! Certain (newer/random) YouTube videos can't be downloaded using my method on Mac OS X 10.6.8 and Safari 5 (now v5.1.9). Not sure what's going on here but something has changed. At first I thought it may have something to do with when Apple snuck v5.1.8 into the recent Security Upadate but now I'm thinking it must have something to do with internal changes on the YouTube site. I say this because the Windows Software I was using as a last resort (to download YouTube videos that were only available in 240p for example, because you have to be able to change the quality setting for my download method to have worked in Safari) also no longer works for an increasingly high amount of newer YouTube uploads. In Safari's Activity window the "videoplayback" file is always split into smaller parts again (just like they were before changing the quality, so that workaround was "fixed" now unfortunately. And if I use the "popout" workaround, Safari no longer adds the .flv or .mp4 extention to the downloaded file but adding it myself results in an unrecognized file that QuickTime Player can't open. Using the Windows software such as GetFLV and PAVTube Pro on these same problematic videos now results in a file with only a blank green screen and no Audio. I never updated Adobe Flash Player on the Windows side so it has to be a change on YouTube. Also on another note, neither VLC Media Player, MPEGStreamClip or MPlayer will open YouTube URL's anymore…

"Activity window" in Safari no longer works to download YouTube videos. Why not? Workaround?

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