
Dettering's company, for example, is forbidden from advertising its software using Google's AdSense and Adwords services – and this site, MakeUseOf, was recently asked by the AdSense team to remove ads from any pages discussing YouTube or music downloading services. Google, which owns YouTube, hasn't attempted to enforce this part of their terms by banning users or sending out legal notices – but they're not doing nothing. Should people who download YouTube videos be worried about this? Hardly any videos display such a link, yet downloading videos with the help of third-party tools is common. "You shall not download any Content unless you see a 'download' or similar link displayed by YouTube," says the YouTube Terms of Service. Fixed user interface glitches on macOS Sierra.Ĭheck to see if your software qualifies for an update or grab them all by purchasing the Suite for 40% off! Just use coupon code UPDATESRULE at checkout to get your discount.But is downloading videos directly from, say, YouTube's servers legally permissible? YouTube's terms of service certainly discourages users from doing so.Audio capture mode (allows you to record any audio playing on your Mac).Support for recent changes to BBC iPlayer.Support for recent changes to Dailymotion.Support for converting to the same folder as the source file.Favor artist album instead of various artists when auto-tagging.Support for recording multiple RTMP streams over the same connection.Extraction engine now supports sites requiring authentication.Support for HTTPS monitoring in Chrome >= v58.



We’ve made a ton of improvements to our Replay Capture Suite, including many fixes and enhancements to Replay Media Catcher, Replay Music, Replay Radio, and Replay Converter. We’re kicking off the season with a ton of amazing updates to your favorite media-recording power pack, so you can download, record and save all the content you want all summer long!
