Google Bars Site That Converts YouTube Songs Into MP3s
An anonymous reader writes "Google is apparently cracking down on a popular site that converts the music from YouTube videos into MP3s. YouTube-MP3.org has received a letter from Google, YouTube's parent company, notifying the site operators that converting videos this way violates YouTube's terms of service, according to the blog TorrentFreak, which said it has seen the letter. In addition, YouTube apparently has blocked YouTube-MP3.org's servers from accessing the site."
So what?
It is trivial to extract the audio from a youtube video and convert it to an mp3. There are tools on Windows, Linux, and OSX that can do that without a lot of effort. So, shutting down this site is, IMO, an exercise in futility.
...people can do better than Mp3.
"YouTube apparently has blocked YouTube-MP3.org's servers from accessing the site." ...and has very nice piece under the example link
Works for me
Because there arent already hundreds of programs that can already do that.
The Mister Rogers remix is a catchy tune. If they put it in iTunes, I'd buy it. I like listening to it as audio only.
There are more than another dozen viable options to download Youtube videos
What about sites that host browser extensions/add-ons/plug-ins? Opera, Chrome and Firefox all have extensions that will do this right from the YouTube page with a single click.
Come on, what was youtube-mp3.org really expecting? This is one of the only routes for Google where they don't get sued for complicity in copyright infringement (note that the right-or-wrong-ness of them getting sued is not what I am saying, it is the likelihood of it). Also, Google probably needs to keep youtube content on youtube, or else they will get no ad revenue (thus, the ToS clause, which I haven't read, and don't know if it exists).
It is not removed from the search results. It is also not a .com... Really, at least fully read the summery.
I just searched for it and it still shows up in search results. From the summary, looks more like they denied the site access to youtube which may still be censorship, but not at all the same thing as you erroneously claim.
that they've been blocked by Google. Nobody will need to look them up any more. :-)
They're about to be Slashdotted
Boy, that sucks. If only there were developers working on cure this ill. Perhaps users of this very site. Maybe they could solve the problem with a firefox extension?
Too bad. Because I would have totally loved that to be a real thing.
Protip: It is, and I'm being cagey.
UTF-8: There and Back Again
Cloud:
- Keepvid: http://keepvid.com/
- Vixy: http://vixy.net/
- Saveyoutube: http://saveyoutube.com/
- Savevid: http://www.savevid.com/
- More: www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=youtube+video+download
Firefox addons:
- Download Flash and Video: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/download-flash-and-video/?src=search
- YouTube Download: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-download/?src=search
- 1-Click YouTube Video Download: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/1-click-youtube-video-download/?src=search
- Download YouTube Videos as MP4 and FLV: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/download-youtube/?src=search
- More: https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/search/?q=firefox+download&appver=&platform=
Chrome extentions:
- YouTube Downloader: MP3 / HD Video: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/hokfcbmfpgeajcgkaeigohghnkhjmcbj
- FVD Video Downloader: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/lfmhcpmkbdkbgbmkjoiopeeegenkdikp
Manually:
- HOWTO: Download FLV videos from YouTube manually: http://inspirated.com/2007/08/24/howto-download-flv-videos-from-youtube-manually
Dear Google,
give up. LOL, noobs...
Regards,
NotASingleF**k.
Not that Google isn't evil when it suits them, but I'm relatively certain that this is a CYA move to keep YouTube from being sued by the **AA using whatever made-up laws their lawyers have pushed through to make this illegal.
It doesn't hurt to be nice.
They haven;t removed it from their search results; they've removed the sites ability to access the youtube servers. It's the opposite to censorship.
Censorship is saying 'I won't let you say that'.
Google is saying 'We're not going to answer you'.
The direction of information transfer is the critical difference; we have no right to shut someone else up, but they have no right to force us to speak.
I don't see why this article is of interest.
A site does something which goes against youtube's TOS - Google changes something in Youtube to block it - and sends a letter to the owner of the website. So?
If you Google it - you still get search results, and Google didn't do any tricks which we find immoral.
Why is this an article? What were we expecting? How could Google have dealth with it better?
I used to use Audacity for this, and it worked well. However, the audio quality on YouTube is noticeably awful.
I don't think they need to block these sites. The poor quality is what finally pushed me to start purchasing songs.
DownloadHelper
Simple solution. Just use the software Replay Music to record whatever you are playing on Youtube or any other website.
Remember kids -- Google took the solemn pinky oath to Not Be Evil, so the removal of YouTube-MP3.com from their search results is for your own good. And remember, Youtube is staunchly against copyright violation and has never violated any copyright or made copyrighted media available to unauthorized parties -- ever.
RTFA, Google did not censor anyone here.
Remember kids -- Google took the solemn pinky oath to Not Be Evil, so the removal of YouTube-MP3.com from their search results is for your own good. And remember, Youtube is staunchly against copyright violation and has never violated any copyright or made copyrighted media available to unauthorized parties -- ever.
Evil is not always black and white. If the choice is between allowing videos to be transcoded to MP3's or having RIAA pull down every song on Youtube because they feel they are going to eat into MP3 sales, which choice would the average user consider to be more evil?
Will youtube.com sue real.com next?
BTW IANAL but I think it's legal to download YouTube video because of the Betamax case. I suspect YouTube-MP3.org may have been targeted because a) they purloined their trademark and b) YouTube-MP3.org acts as a third party "distributing" copyrighted works (not merely Betamaxing it for time-shifting) because they act as an intermediary between YouTube and the end user. It's the low-hanging fruit for YouTube -- if they can succeed against YouTube-MP3.org then probably the next target will be a similar site that doesn't mimic their trademark. Then if they succeed with that maybe they'll even try their luck with going after tool vendors (though probably at first one smaller than real.com), thereby overturning Betamax.
They're blocking their servers from downloading the videos. They aren't removing it from their search results. That's exactly what I'd do in their case. They'll simply feed it URLs, see who connects to download the video, block the IP, and repeat.
This seems like a complete non-story to me. But then, I've never heard of that site before. If it is actually popular, I can see why that alone would make it news-worthy. As a technical person, I'd look for a browser plugin to download the video, then a desktop app to rip the audio. Searching for a website which automates the process wouldn't have even occurred to me. It's funny how being technical can cause you to miss the boat on some trends just because the problem addressed was just never a problem for you in the first place..
Uhm what? If they didn't block the site, but removed it from search results, people could still find it via other links and use it. Blocking it from youtube just leaves a useless husk in the search results, so I don't quite get your point.
apt-get install youtube-dl (deb, ubuntu) pacman -S youtube-dl (arch)
A Google service for bars called "Google Bars" that converts youtube songs into MP3.
Even if Chrome developers thought a javascript API to read from or tap the sound output was useful they would not add it because that would enable ripping youtube songs entirely client-side and it couldn't be blocked... the best you might get is a patch included in a poorly maintained fork of Chromium.
By using Chrome, you are promoting a web designed to work the way an advertising company wants it to work.
Anyone who can't figure out how to download the video for himself, then rip an MP3 from the video, doesn't deserve to listen to the music. Geez, Louise - you don't even have to be a Linux guru to figure this stuff out!
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
The site is still the first result on Google when you search "YouTube mp3". I clicked through that link, found a youtube video URL in another tab, converted and downloaded the mp3, which worked perfectly.
Maybe this is a publicity stunt to appease the RIAA, because nothing has really changed.
...a desktop app to rip the audio...
No excuse for mousey-clicky, simply type into the command line:
ffmpeg -i my_video_file.avi extracted_audio.mp3
mplayer -dumpaudio my_video_file.avi -dumpfile extracted_audio.mp3
This kind of shit happens all day, every day. Some website/program does something that violates another site/programs EULA. We dont need to know about every god damn one of them.
I use(d) these sites when a family member says "can you get me this song on my mp3 player?". I felt, honestly, since the service was out there, especially for so long, that they had some sort of deal worked out and this was a legitimate way to grab popular music (figuring advertising kickback).
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
The mods over at youtube-mp3.org have already fixed the problem, probably swapped ip's or something.
the site is back up working 100%...
youtube/google has failed and original post is no longer relevant.
Why should I "figure it out" when I can just copy and paste a URL, then click the "download mp3" link?
"When life gives you lemons, don't make lemonade. Make life take the lemons back!" -- Cave Johnson
yeah, that part is easy. Now, from the command line, can you provide something to extract the music from all the video listed at http://www.youtube.com/music, skipping ads ?
This could easily be replaced with a browser plugin. Then there's no one to C&D because the author of such a plugin need never agree to Googles TOS. Google would have to C&D their users directly.
Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
Indeed.
Previously, I have done as the GGP described. Lost the plugin and converter in a reformat (curse you, Windows!), and you know what? It was less of a hassle to just use a website to convert it on those rare occasions that I actually *did* want to download a Youtube video as an MP3, than it would have been to reinstall and configure the special software to do it. I don't do it that often, so I don't need the sort of instant capabilities of a browser plugin.
Redirecting YouTube-MP3.org to the song "Never Gonna Give You Up" would have been more appropriate.
cclive or clive $URL, then the commands above?
I though it was abandonned, thanks for pointing out it was alive again :)
You don't even need to figure out how to download the video, flash does this for you, it doesn't actually stream, it'll leave copies of the files it "streamed" sitting in the temp folder while the player is still visible.
There are still a number of sites out there that don't make mention of YouTube in their domain name that allow you to keep YouTube vids as MP4, MP3, etc. . So I doubt they'll catch them anytime soon.
http://rg3.github.com/youtube-dl/documentation.html
Anyone who can't figure out how to download the video for himself, then rip an MP3 from the video, doesn't deserve to listen to the music
That's like saying anyone who can't figure out how to install a tap doesn't deserve water.
This kind of attitude LOWERS the value of technical people. You are basically saying that this is the standard that separate the normal people from the retards.
Not only did it recode the audio data, losing some quality, but it was also closed-source software-as-a-service. Good riddance.
If you've already bought a smartphone and it isn't made by Apple or Nokia, then you have an Android-powered PMP supporting .ogg files. If you haven't already bought a smartphone, you can buy an $80 PCD Venture phone from Virgin Mobile and never buy minutes for it.
It's funny how being technical can cause you to miss the boat on some trends just because the problem addressed was just never a problem for you in the first place.
Truer words were rarely spoken. I would have done it myself, just like you. I had heard of them, but barely knew they existed and the whole concept made me nauseous because I care about quality.
I always go for the best quality possible, not speed and ease of acquisition. But lets face it: you and I and all of the genuine geeks here (and there are a ton of pretenders who post at Slashdot) amount to f***-all - we're not 99.9% of the world.
You have to constantly remind yourself that 99.99% of computer "users" are 10-year-old girls or 30-something techno-duhs.
To them, the computer is just an obnoxious tool (and if they had it their way, it would be invisible or non-existant) and anything that makes it *easier* to use (even if it makes it less flexible than it could be and even if the end-quality is vastly inferior) will naturally attract them.
Microsoft (once the world's most successful crap-marketing company) proved that people will buy sow's ears if the b.s. is strong and price is tolerable. They work on the "there's one born every minute to buy this crap" principle (I often think the world would be much farther ahead technologically if Bill Gates Sr. had only used a condom) and it worked well for them. Good technology - what's that and why should we give a damn?
The bottom line: K.I.S.S. wins again and quality and flexibility be damned.
This seems like a complete non-story to me.
I couldn't agree more. So are most "stories" for which links are posted at Slashdot (and for which Slashdot gets users to post teasers that Slashdot doesn't even fact-check and rarely edits - I don't think Slashdot actually does any work but sell advertising). But Slashdot is a for-profit business and it needs "eyeballs" to sell the advertising. That's all.
"You are basically saying that this is the standard that separate the normal people from the retards."
Welllllll - let's just say that a lot of elementary school age children can figure it out for themselves. One of whom is closely related to me. I walked in his room, looked over his shoulder, and asked, "What you doing, Son?" "Oh, I like this song, so I'm piping it through VLC and saving the audio so that I can play it back on my iPod."
My answer? "Son, you have poor taste in music. Who the hell is this Nickel Back dude? And, why does he sound like he's been smoking raw hemp? Why don't you look for some Foreigner, or Boston, or some other real music?" Of course, this was a few years ago - the boy is out of school now.
"Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
afterall, so far, there's no DRM that can keep someone from plugging the analog audio-out cable from their computer into their sound card though I'm sure some day RIAA and MPAA will make sure we have analog fingerprints on all of our outputs that would close this analog hole
One way to work around the analog hole is by making a work interactive because a walkthrough video is no substitute for playing it yourself. That might be part of why MPAA members such as Disney and WB have started subsidiaries that develop video games.
Someone who rips an mp3 from a youtube video, is not a technical person. Someone who replaces their linux kernel scheduler with an out of tree one, is.
pacman -S youtube-dl (arch)
How long until Namco Bandai cease-and-desists the maintainer of this method?
seriously.. I just added a jscript to Opera in order to have a download button on every single youtube videos, can download the mp3 or in any other resolutions available.
Youtube is accusing me of plagiarizing, because i put a PUBLIC DOMAIN audio track of "The Star Spangled Banner" in the video. Their automatic software however has decided this is false positive enough with someone else's recording of OUR NATIONAL ANTHEM (!?) to block my video. I disputed the claim, linked to the public domain audio source, and now I have until July 18 to twiddle my thumbs while Youtube placates the copyright trolls.
Our intellectual property system is an absurdity that hinders creativity, I want to live in a just and sane society. Our intellectual property system is incompatible with being fixed, and any move to a more sane status quo requires that it be made abundantly clear to everyone that laws put on the books in the days of cassette tapes do not work in a world of TCP/IP.
I support anything and everything that directly undermines the enforcement of intellectual property laws. Civil Disobedience is what is needed, civil disobedience here in this context is any and all actions that are sane and reasonable consumer actions of YOUR CULTURE but obviously not in line with intellectual property letter of the law. Supporting artists does not mean supporting the parasitical corporations and laws that merely operate on a rent seeking basis, and add no value to our culture or our creativity.
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
Posting to remove accidental negative moderation.
I agree. Computer users should not need to know the inner details of how everything works on their computer in order to use it. Also, this goes back to my sig: having (effectively) a single video sharing website on the internet is bad because it can unilaterally do things like this.
Centralization breaks the internet.
Okay, look, we all know how easy this stuff is to get around. That is the whole point. Google wants to educate the public on how to use computers for getting copies of music better.
First off, Google knows you can easily get a better copy of the song by using google. But people are lazy and don't to go thru instructions on how to do anything, they just want to pop an address in and out comes whatever they want. Google isn't happy about this. See, google makes a search engine, and if you always use the top find, you're wasting all the power of google going thru and ranking all the other links.
So now, people are going to have to use google and actually read and click on the other search results, not just the top one!!!!
It justifies all of googles computers.
Be seeing you...
The original summary stated that Google had removed the site from their search results. That to me is censorship.
No, I did not read the article, so I guess that's what I get for commenting on what was written in the summary.
Nickelback is a group.
Which I'm guessing you bought before Nokia's shift in strategy to Windows Phone 7 and its reentry to the United States market. It's not like the N900 or N9 was sold in carrier-owned stores or big box stores in the United States. But I agree with you that an N900 or N9 is as good as an Android-powered phone for playing .ogg recordings.
we need to acknowledge that a lot of the rabble these days use non-desktop machines (like [barf!] so-called phones, etc.) to access Yotub that don't have the tools for a DIY job on that non-desktop machine.
But they can "surf" and download with them, so ...
As a technical person, I'd look for a browser plugin to download the video, then a desktop app to rip the audio.
while that works and will continue to work, this site is infinitely more convenient. you put in the youtube url and get an mp3 download link pretty much instantly. either they download and convert it really fast, or they cache the mp3 after the first time they convert it. caching makes sense as it would be silly to download and convert the same popular video thousands of times.
no joke, my 12 year old cousin actually knew how to do all of that, This really is something that never even was a thought to me because the way to do it is so simple.
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
So I just tried it out, it seems to work just fine..huh.
Admit nothing. Deny Everything. Make Counter-accusations.
Once you figure it out, you can use this knowledge to extract audio or video portions from video sources other than YouTube. You also have the freedom of not relying on a third party service to extract the audio for you.
There isn't even a need to figure out anything. It's already been figured. You only need to perform a web search.
This sucks for music lovers - especially those of us who love rare dance 12 inches and alternate mixes. I've found hundreds of songs that were never mainstream enough for radio but were played in dance clubs when I was younger... In so many cases there is just no way to purchase any of these songs legally and making playlists on YouTube just isn't feasible... this is a very useful service and one that Google should acknowledge by providing it for a fee. I don't mind paying for a higher quality audio MP3 of some of these YouTube videos that are really nothing more visual than a static photo. The service they're blocking often produces lower quality audio but it's fine on my iPod or phone.
winff
no need for this online stuff
It's far easier to just launch the sound recorder of your choice (on windows) and select an audio source of "what you hear". It's not like it takes any technical skill. I don't understand really what value a separate website to do it for you provides.
The original summary stated that Google had removed the site from their search results.
I have been bit by that as well. It throws me, since we can not change our posts... So, sorry for the assumption.
See if this works for you: Rockbox (WARNING: it's firmware, so install at your own risk! especially "iPod classic" is listed as "status unstable").
It's supposed to play MP3, other MPEG audio, Ogg, AAC, WMA, Speex, FLAC, AC3, and more. Disclaimer: I haven't got a portable media player besides ancient cassette walkman, so I haven't tried it out myself.
Wish I had mod points!
Whoosh, whoosh-ity whoosh.
systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
http://rogueamoeba.com/audiohijackpro/ - definitely worth the $32 to be able to record anything passing through the computer's audio chain.
Downside (small): realtime. Upside: uses VST plugins to screw your sound all over the place if you want.
For all those not understanding why such service is useful: If you live somewhere with limited bandwidth and slow connection, downloading a video could take hours, and resume is not well supported if you want to download the video, so such service as youtube-mp3, saves lots of time and bandwidth when all you need is to listen to the information / music in the video and not to watch the contents
mmmmm.....
Even easier just don't be a cheap bastard and buy Speed MP3 downloader which i got off of giveawayoftheday but you can buy it for like $25, and it lets you set tags, choose bitrates, its really nice and beyond simple. hell your grandma could run it. Sure you can go through the steps of using a browser extension, downloading to desktop, converting to MP3 then, but why bother? With Speed you don't even have to fire up your browser, just pick what you want from it and hit the download button. they have a free trial so check it out, if for some reason i ever screw up and lose the GAOTD version i'll just buy it, being that hassle free is worth $25 IMHO.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
It DOES violate the YouTube TOS. What did they expect was going to happen?
i've read their site... what the hell does it actually do? i.e. which service(s) is it scumming the content from?
"They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
Now that they are both provider and in effect produce, the shoe is on the other foot
What ever happened to fair use? Oh, that is right the AA's have about stamped that out.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
why not have a website like youtube, but where everything on it goes into the public domain once uploaded. Of course checks would need to be made towards authenticity of ownership of material by the uploader, and that it's not plagiarizing something else copyrighted (etc), but I dunno, it seems this would be a good idea and a website I'd definitely frequent perhaps as much if not more than youtube.
Pretty much all of them, youtube, vevo,mtv,, pretty much ANY site that has videos and is of any real size they end up having it on there. Like I said they have a trial version for free, give it a spin, you'll find its the easiest song downloader around. Hell I would have never heard of it either if it hadn't been on giveawayoftheday a month or two ago and decided to give it a spin, but DAMN, it finds just about anything you want in just about any bitrate, you can look by artist, song name, and damned if it won't find it. hell I even downloaded some bird sounds for the neighbor's parakeet with it, just click and go. The tagger is also nice, you can fill in the data in the style you use in your music folder so you don't have to screw with retagging.
Anyway give it a go, with a free trial it isn't like it'll cost anything but a couple of minutes to try it out. i love how it can even come up with live and alternate versions, really awesome to hear some of my fav songs live or unplugged or alternate versions i didn't even know existed.
ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
I personally didn't feel like "figuring it out" across three different platforms for something I only used about twice a month.
Honestly, if I'm listening to an interview or a standup routine from Youtube, I don't NEED the video of someone talking. And if I'm anywhere where bandwidth is limited or just plain sucks, I appreciate having an MP3 converter two clicks away that doesn't require me to horse the video across a line that's struggling to stay above dialup levels.
interesting. i don't use windows, but if it can really find the stuff i look for and at decent bitrates, it could save me some hours. i'll keep it in mind.
"They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
What I'd like to know is: When someone embeds a YouTube video in another web page (which I believe YouTube even facilitates) or inserts it into an e-mail, where are these things called Terms Of Service of which you speak?
Personally for three years I thought it was just a derisive term for a particularly talentless band.
A bullet may have your name on it but splash damage is addressed "To whom it may concern."
Anyone who knows how to run an ffmpeg-one-liner is probably not wasting his time listening to crappy You-Tube recordings via crappy soundcards and even crappier speakers. I wonder how the imbeciles who do are actually finding the ripping site. Oh let me guess - they have an "app" with a single button to push...
Oh, the beautiful gloss of greality!
Bad analogy. It's more like "anyone who can't figure out how to open a water tap will have to buy bottled water."
Oh, the beautiful gloss of greality!
this should keep the MAFIAA quiet for a while.
it's an ineffective token move, no doubt designed to placate an ineffective and token business model and keep them off their back for a bit.
They will block that next.... This really is not news worthy, the sound quality of these videos on YouTube are horrible, even the the ones that seem to have "high quality" are pretty bad when converting them to mp3's. I had been doing this for a short time then I got worried over getting nailed for piracy, using a browser plug-in, then converting to MP3. From the other comments it is not that someone does not know how to do this, it is just a short cut, I would figure you could just google how to do this manually instead of using a web site, but I guess that is wishful thinking!!!! My point would be because of the crap quality, why would Google waste the time to do this, the record industry should just push for the videos to be banned, or sue Google. Google's new slogan should be "Selling Out, Good Luck!!!"
Most Opera browser add-ons for converting YouTube to mp3 work by submitting the YouTube URL to various on-line converter sites such as YouTube-MP3.org. The add-on description tells you the ripping site. No need to Google ripping sites. I imagine other browser add-ons work the same way.
Most of my conversions are of generally poor-quality live recordings, so bad soundcards and speakers don't really matter.
It used to do that but since a year or so I don't find the .flv files anymore in my .tmp directory. They're 'unlinked' as soon as they're created meaning they're invisible in normal file system use.
"I'm not much interested in interoperability. I want substitutability. I want to be able to throw your software out."
considering the absurd amount of compression applied to the video during upload. Seems like transcoding between at least two different lossy codecs after applying already pretty conservative compression parameters.