Google Videos Going Offline; Time To Grab What You Want 131
An anonymous reader writes "I received this email this morning: 'Later this month, hosted video content on Google Video will no longer be available for playback. Google Video stopped taking uploads in May 2009 and now we're removing the remaining hosted content... On April 29, 2011, videos that have been uploaded to Google Video will no longer be available for playback.' They've added a download button for saving your content but it expires after May 13, 2011 and they encourage users to move the content to YouTube."
Not all is lost, though. Writes reader none295: "If you want to help archive Google Video, get some Linux machines running and join us in IRC (EFNet #archiveteam / #googlegrape)."
The cloud. (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:The cloud. (Score:4, Insightful)
you cant expect a paid service to stay online forever.
if you care about it you have your own copy
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it's swings and roundabouts, though. If you only have your own copy and it's not online somewhere, then you're at risk of theft, fire, flood, magnets, children pouring water on your pc etc etc. A professionally backed up cloud is way safer.
It's safer to say "If you care about it you have your own copy AND a copy on the cloud".
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it's swings and roundabouts, though. If you only have your own copy and it's not online somewhere, then you're at risk of theft, fire, flood, magnets, children pouring water on your pc etc etc. A professionally backed up cloud is way safer.
It's safer to say "If you care about it you have your own copy AND a copy on the cloud".
True. Or have your own copies in multiple locations. It doesn't have to be some buzzword-compliant cloud service.
And if it is information that you don't want to disclose, take appropriate measures. For example, store the copies in encrypted form, and keep multiple, password-protected copies of the key.
Also, make sure to regularly verify that your backups can be restored, and that this gives you everything you would need after a restore.
Of course, all of this is covered in The Tao Of Backup [taobackup.com]
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You can expect anything you want, really. It's one of things that's great about being human.
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It's easy to sit there and say you'd like to have more money. And I guess that's what I like about it. It's easy. Just sitting there, rocking back and forth, wanting that money. - Jack Handey
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"And you can get anything you want... at Alice's Restaurant."
Excepting Alice.
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You and Grandpa Dvorak.
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You and Grandpa Dvorak.
Speaking of whom, has he ever learned to pronounce silicon?
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Google could also erase your videos the same day that your house burns down, thereby destroying all copies. It's far fetched, but it could happen. A tertiary backup could also get destroyed at the same time and making more backups than that on a regular basis would get to be a hassle, especially if you are constantly verifying that they work. However,we have to get past the point of acceptance that on rare but possible occasions, every once in a while, a few people are just going to have their ass handed
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Are there really that many people who delete their local file once it goes on YouTube?
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Even if somebody is keeping a local copy, they might not bother to reupload it to another service and fix all the now obsolete links to the old content, which is why always a large part of the content will be lost in a take down of a service. Sad to see such a move from Google, who not only are not bankrupt, but also have another video service right next door to which they could move the content.
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Which doesn't change the fact that people have the chance to retrieve their data only because Google was accommodating. A scenario where nobody gets time to get their stuff out is not only plausible, but, in my opinion, inevitable in the long run.
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the FREE cloud (Score:2)
You mean the 'free cloud' is not a good place to rely on. Paid cloud space is as 'permanent' as you want it to be.
AmieStreet (Score:2)
Khm... AmieStreet. Bought up by Amazon, can't access my songs anymore.
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Um, about that... (Score:2)
Just like photos never get removed on paid Flickr accounts, or Microsoft never loses Sidekick data. Right?
Oh wait...
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Paid Flickr accounts run by people who read the Terms of Service almost never have problems.
PS nobody ever claimed these were where you should store the only copies of your data.
Re:The cloud. (Score:5, Interesting)
Here's what I don't understand: why can't they just move the Google Video content over to youtube themselves? They own both services. Why make everyone who wants to keep their video download it locally and reupload it back to Google's servers?
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Not if google buys and sacks the lot of em.
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Here's what I don't understand: why can't they just move the Google Video content over to youtube themselves? They own both services. Why make everyone who wants to keep their video download it locally and reupload it back to Google's servers?
I think there are a couple reasons.
1. This gives them a chance to abandon a LOT of data that nobody cares about any more. These services get a lot of crap uploaded which ends up being completely forgotten about, and if it's not viewable by the public isn't doing anything for anybody. That still equates to cost in terms of storage space and processing times for backups, etc.
2. They probably don't want to just create a shitload of new youtube accounts. They're hoping people either setup a new account (and wit
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I wondered the same, but Google Video has always been much less restricted than YouTube in terms of content.
Unless it's changed one example that comes to mind is that YouTube never used to allow the raw unedited footage of the Sknyliv airshow disaster, yet Google video did.
So even if they moved it across I suspect there is some content that would be lost forever, which is bad news for anyone wanting to see what the real aftermath of a fighter jet crashing into a crowd is. You know, just in case you ever nee
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You say that in a way that implies that there is a good _single_ place to permanently store data? Would you mind sharing what that is?
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Yet another example for people who say that the cloud is a good place to permanently store their data....
Yes, but people will never learn. They'll always say something stupid like, "Well, you shouldn't have been using that service. Something like that could never happen to the service I use."
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Yet another reason not to use Google for anything other than what it is...A search engine.
Oh no! (Score:1)
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Sometimes I *want* to give them my money (Score:2)
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and if some smart ass answers for that specific movie, I've got a list of dozens of others that I would buy if it were available from a legitimate source.
(of course, most of them would be public domain by now under the original rules, but that's another debate)
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Star Wars Christmas special, amirite?
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Youtube has a high-quality version. [youtube.com]
I also got the content removal email, but my content was a promo video for an event that is long past, so it's OK by me.
Re:Oh no! (Score:5, Funny)
"This video contains content from EMI, who has blocked it in your country on copyright grounds."
Thanks for the notice EMI. Next time I want to buy audio/video content I will make sure to block you too. Just returning the favor...
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Yes you might not care about a single promo video anymore but think of all the information that will disappear from the internet, never to be seen again, if nobody uploads it anywhere else. If you no longer have the originals, you'll never be able to watch that video again.
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Good thing they provide a download link.
Why? (Score:3, Interesting)
Why didnt they just dump it all on youtube in the first place?
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Maybe the user agreement for uploading to Google Video wasn't flexible enough to allow Google to copy the videos to Youtube?
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they could easily add an exception for videos migrated from google video.
Smells Like Old Google (Score:2)
Yeah, this smells of the Schmidt-era silos. "Oh, we're YouTube, not Google Video". I'm surprised this decision made it past the new Larry/Sergey management team. Maybe it was decided a few months ago. But New-Again Google should be agile enough to undecide things.
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Then they could give you a button that says "Migrate to YouTube" and be done with it.
This is obviously just a guess - but I wouldn't be surprised if, from a legal standpoint, that could open them up for lawsuits when an end-user moves copyrighted material from Google Video to YouTube.
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Yes... What's more surprising than the closure is that it wasn't on YouTube.
For some reason, I always thought that Google, years ago, decided to make Google Video simply mirror the contents of YouTube and vice versa.
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> Why didnt they just dump it all on youtube in the first place?
Because youtube don't have "Download this video" button.
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Most likely because username/password databases for both of them can't easily be merged and because google won't have a clue how to determine who is who on which site.
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you mad bro? I currently have 1 video on youtube and zero on google.
anyway its just a little blunt, and could be handled by a "yea move my stuff from one service to another" page along with downloads and "eh screw it"
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Probably because my Google Video account is different to my YouTube account. What if I don't even have a YouTube account. Under who's name do they say the video is stored? Who is the "uploader".
This also provides a good opportunity to clear out all the videos that are obsolete and of which nobody cares about enough to migrate them themselves
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I just figured it out, click on Edit Video Info and then without changing anything click on save. Like magic the download link appears.
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I prefer http://rg3.github.com/youtube-dl/ [github.com] personally :)
youtube-dl is a small command-line program to download videos from YouTube.com and a few more sites. It requires the Python interpreter, version 2.x (x being at least 5), and it is not platform specific. It should work in your Unix box, in Windows or in Mac OS X. It is released to the public domain, which means you can modify it, redistribute it or use it however you like.
Have been using it for months now (mostly because youtube insist on cutting the streaming speed to 20kbps now and then), and it have worked perfectly. Put the urls in a text file, point the script to the file, and off it goes.
"blip.tv" not too bad (Score:3)
I've been putting my video on blip.tv instead of YouTube. It's strictly a hosting and streaming service - no one will find your video on blip.tv unless it's linked from elsewhere. It streams nicely, though.
Download link? Where??? (Score:2)
We've added a Download button to the video status page, so you can download any video content you want to save.
Google sent me an email to let me know. I don't see a download link where they say it should be.
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If the "Download" button doesn’t appear, please follow the steps below to enable this option for your video.
Sign into your Google Video account at https://upload.video.google.com/ [google.com]
On the Video Status page, click the "Edit Video Info >>" link next to the video you wish to change.
Click on "Advanced Options."
Check the box beside "Allow users to download this video."
When you’re finished editing your video's information, click the "Save Video Information" button at the bottom of the page.
from here [google.com]
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After Google send the mail half my videos didn't have download links, now, a few hours later, all have them. Seems like the download feature requires some work on their side and wasn't instantly applied to every video.
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If you want videos archived post the links and we'll add it to the central download queue for the Archive.org downloading effort :)
--ksh @ #googlegrape EFNet
Why Doesn't Google Move It All to YouTube? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why doesn't Google just make all the Google Video content available as YouTube videos instead? Why not even keep redirecting Google Video URLs to the converted YouTube version? It seems like a lot more work for Google to manage the shutdown than to move it to YouTube, to say nothing of the work by users and lost value when video doesn't make the transition.
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I think it's the law. When somebody uploaded vvideo to google videos they gave Google license to stream that video on google videos, for youtube you need to accept other using agreement or something.
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If this were the main concern, Google could put up a simple checkbox "Allow this video to be transferred to YouTube", and save all the download and re-upload hassle.
Certainly, the shutdown as implemented is less total work for Google, and makes sense if Google doesn't want the host the video anymore. But, since YouTube exists, and does what it does, one would presume that Google likes keeping piles of crap videos online.
Most likely, the Mountain View Google Video team is getting shut down, and they don't ha
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YouTube doesn't need any relationship with GV, or for a GV team to exist, to install a "transfer this video to YouTube" on GV videos. That doesn't seem to be more work that shutting down GV and operating the phase it's in. Keeping more video in the server storage is very little work for YouTube's people. The computers don't complain about the extra work, and the extra work gives more value to YouTube's users - the reason Google operates it.
One answer (Score:3)
It's possible that Google have looked at the Google Video stats and seen that only a small proportion of videos are actually watched. For them to assume everything is still valid, worthwhile content people care about and move it over is probably a decent chunk of work, not to mention all the resources it would consume to do so.
So, putting the onus on the people who actually care about the video to do something with it is a pretty big cost-saver for them. I agree it would still be nice of them to do it thoug
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For a company that gives away several gigabytes of email storage for free to anyone who bothers to sign up, who also keeps several copies in RAM of any document which they can manage to crawl across on Teh Intarwebs, and who is busily trying to photograph every city street and make the results available for free, I really don't think that the amount of space consumed by Google Video is really significant in any meaningful way.
Just a guess, of course.
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Moving the video content to YouTube, as I said, would make your risk disappear.
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Google caches all kinds of content across the Internet, including media files, regardless of the frequency with which they're downloaded. I don't think the relative unpopularity of GV content determined its value in keeping. Especially since the primary factor in its unpopularity was being locked up in GV instead of in YouTube.
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Yes. If they didn't they wouldn't be shutting down Google Video.
Google Video is better (Score:1)
Only Your Videos (Score:3)
I went to check on one of the long videos I've recommended to folks and there was no download button. It seems that's only there for your own videos. Which seems odd, didn't Google Video used to always have a download button, for people who don't know how to find Flash cache files?
Anyway, it wasn't clear to me from the summary that this is only for your own files. Abandoned videos will be abandoned, apparently.
But, hey, good news, a better quality verison [youtube.com] was on YouTube. This might even be the longest video I've ever seen on YouTube. (p.s. good documentary for history and/or economics geeks).
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I agree, it's highly recommended...for conspiracy theorists as well.
Cheers for posting the link!
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Post the google video link and we'll add it to the central download queue for the Archive.org downloading effort :)
--ksh @ #googlegrape EFNet
Invalid Request (Score:1)
lost confidence (Score:2)
This is a disgrace. (Score:1)
Google is going to cancel one of the best video services on the internet because it doesn't have the same domain name as YouTube? There are lots of great videos which are on Google video because they are over an hour long. On Youtube they are broken up into many chunks.
What is Google going to do? Erase them all? All they have to do is transfer the goddamn videos to youtube or let us do it at the click of a button. This on top of them forcing us to give them our cellphone numbers for authentication are two r
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A) Nobody said anything about cell phones, they just asked for a phone number
B) You don't have to give it. I left the filed blank without any problems.
Helping if you don't have massive bandwidth avail. (Score:1)
I wanted to pitch in and help if I could, but didn't have massive bandwith or storage to offer - turns out you can help by scraping Google Video for links.
Here's how:
Note: This will only work on Linux machines with X running - you can't run it on headless servers due to phantomjs requirements.
1 - Get and build phantomjs [github.com] (a headless web browser) by doing the following:
- Install build-essential, git and libqtwebkit-dev if necessary
- Create a directory
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google grape not google rape