![]() That said embedding might be prevented, and that wouldn't be a good idea, for bloggers.or any other site btw. seriously, downloading will always be possible, you're getting the streaming data, nothing can prevent you from caching it and save it to disk what ever the format is. Currently you still have to take care of the macromedia folder in your user profile, so that's already a plus for HTML5. And same blank window when I try to watch a video on. So I went back to the stable version 54, but the Youtube HTML5 page still shows the same options supported. I tried your video player but the look was not nice as the video was inserting very big, not looks nice in the page. Please open your website and navigate to Plugins > SiteOrigin Widgets and activate the Video Player widget. They only said it is implemented in the nightly version. I just noticed you’re using the Video widget instead of our Video Player. ![]() Once you've cleared your private data in Firefox, there won't be anything left when using HTML5. I don't think they mentioned it when I was looking up something like those container tabs. HTML5 for a start shouldn't allow all the tracking and privacy concerns there has always been with Adobe/Macromedia flash player. ![]() If HTML5 became a further restriction I don't really care, but I doubt it. Downloading videos on the internet is a technical possibility, not a right You're watching what's been put online by someone who made a video, and the sharing conditions are up to this someone in the end. So, when it's doable it's doable, via any FF extension or else, and when it's not it's not and I won't complain about it. Look the thing is as you know that it's not strictly legal to download videos when there's not an explicit link to do so, meaning that the author/owner prefers that his work would be streamed only. The HTML5-6 quality might be better but the user is not the first priority and the central axis around which it all evolves. Autoplay: Slide to YES to automatically play the video on page load Play on. I have come upon a site recently where as a precaution matter (because of rights of third parties) the e-book download was only in text format and the pictures were all greyed out (book published in the thirties of the previous century). If the video is not in your Media Library, switch this toggle on. I saw postings of webmaster questioning how they could restrict the users to only viewing and to prevent embedding and linking (Flash is no longer used)? I know there are parties that want this restriction applied generally and prohibit embedding and downloading alltogether (we are in the days of transition to more restrictive user policies because of commercial interests- where they also risk to shoot themselves in the foot by alieneating the user even further, as some also would like to restrict linking, blogging etc. I am just anxious to hear from you what is the relation of HTML5 and embedding and downloading.
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