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September 26, 2007

Google Hosts Videos from Third-Party Sites

I was complaining in May that Google Video served content from third-party sites (not from Google-owned sites) in a Google Video-branded player and hosted all the content on its servers. Google changed its mind in June and started to only show thumbnails from the videos.

Apparently, this was only a change in exposing the content, because Google continue to host FLV videos from third-party sites like Metacafe. Searching for [Sunshine Metacafe] on SearchMash, an experimental Google site, you'll notice that, even though all the videos come from Metacafe, the interface doesn't communicate this. The only way to realize that the source of the videos is Metacafe is by clicking on "see larger video". You'll be sent to a Google Video page that shows the original source in a frame.

All the videos from third-party sites are displayed in a Google Video player...


... and they're hosted on Google's servers:


I agree that it's more convenient to host all the videos in the world and play them using a standard interface, but I don't think copyright laws allow you to do that. It's the same reason why Google only shows thumbnails in Google Image Search and sends you to the original site to see the images in full size.

Other video search engines have different ways of displaying videos: Yahoo Video shows a thumbnail and sends you to the original site, Truveo displays the embedded player of the original site, while Blinkx hosts a 30 seconds preview for each video.

5 comments:

  1. Plus, Google Video displays all external video sites in a Google.com frame wrapper. How uncool is that? Imagine all bloggers would now start to link to Google.com content in their own, blog-specific frameset wrappers. Imagine Google would now link web search results in their own frame set.

    Larry Page, in 2004:
    "Most portals show their own content above content elsewhere on the web. We feel that’s a conflict of interest, analogous to taking money for search results. Their search engine doesn’t necessarily provide the best results; it provides the portal’s results. Google conscientiously tries to stay away from that. We want to get you out of Google and to the right place as fast as possible. It’s a very different model."
    http://www.google-watch.org/playboy.html

    ReplyDelete
  2. Perhaps the flash file on Google's server is simply a wrapper that streams the content from the other sites?

    ReplyDelete
  3. It's just a wrapper hosted on Google's server. Try to download it, and you will find the file size is not as large as it should be.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well, I downloaded the file from my example and it has 4.38 MB. The original FLV from Metacafe has 5.05 MB, but that's because Google reencoded it.

    Here's some info via VideoLan.

    Metacafe file: -link
    (Video)
    Codec:VP6F
    Resolution:292x240
    (Audio)
    Codec:mp3
    Channels:2
    Sample rate:44100Hz

    Google file: -link
    (Video)
    Codec:FLV1
    Resolution:320x240
    (Audio)
    Codec:mp3
    Channels:1
    Sample rate:22050Hz

    ReplyDelete

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