Downloading Web videos using Freeware
Need to download a web video from YouTube, Facebook, etc. Here are two Freeware tools that can help, one of which you likely already have.
Let's make it a great Friday, my friends. 😎
There is more Digital & Multimedia Evidence (DME) than any other type of evidence today.
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Need to download a web video from YouTube, Facebook, etc. Here are two Freeware tools that can help, one of which you likely already have.
Let's make it a great Friday, my friends. 😎
Imagine the following scenario:
You're the first responding officer to a crime scene and have just completed taking the victim's statement. You then tell the victim you have to leave for another call. Before you go you politely ask the victim to take photos of the scene and their injuries, collect all of the DNA and fingerprint evidence, and note that you'll either be back later in the day or maybe tomorrow or the next day to pick it all up. You note that they can just leave the evidence at the front desk for you.
This is exactly how many agencies have chosen to deal with the overwhelming amount of DCCTV evidence available to them today. "Oh, there's video? Okay, have someone export it and we'll come back to pick it up."
A couple of years ago I did a series of posts on aspect ratio correction of DCCTV recordings; more specifically DCCTV recordings captured by analog CCTV cameras, and correcting Display Aspect Ratio (DAR) for forensic interpretation. I pointed out in my posts and the subsequent Video & Display Standards Chart, that the one exception that I'm aware of where a DCCTV recording captured by an analog CCTV camera shouldn't be displayed 4:3, was the relatively new 960H format.