It is possible to analyze a YouTube video that has many clips in t and made it as a trailer? If yes, how can...











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I have found a YouTube video that has some clips take from different video clips and added into one video and made it be as a trailer.



I want to know what are the possibilities of analyzing such videos for finding the the videos in which the clips from that video is taken.



Questions: What are the possibilities for analyzing and finding the videos in which the clips are taken? If there are, can you please tell me how to do this if it is possible?



Because, there’s a YouTube video which I need to analyze it and find the videos in which the clips from that video is taken and made it as a trailer.



Hopefully I have codify it and write in a proper manner this time.



P.S.I know I have asked the same question as the previous one. I tried to edit it but, it didn’t let me not even to delete it because it is locked. But please don’t consider it as off topic. Just ignore the previous one.










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put on hold as too broad by n8te, Toto, DavidPostill 19 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.















  • You likely won't be able to. You'd need to build identifiers for the source material and check the trailer for those identifiers. As such you'd already need to know what that trailer might contain.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth identifiers? What’s that?
    – Alex A
    yesterday










  • That would depend on what you do. Building a hash for single frames - as it's reencoded it's unreliable. Building a scanner to find frames with sufficient similarity. Using more than frame at a time etc. there is a lot that would go into it. A lot of it would depend on your needed quality of the results. Account for false positives etc.. Essentially what you're trying to do sounds like what YouTube already does with ContentID. The reverse approach would be to take something from the trailer and check every other existing YouTube video for it.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth yes exactly what I’m trying to do. Because there’s a video which I can’t remember how it is called and I found a clip from it i a video trailer. And I wish I can watch it one more.
    – Alex A
    yesterday















up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












I have found a YouTube video that has some clips take from different video clips and added into one video and made it be as a trailer.



I want to know what are the possibilities of analyzing such videos for finding the the videos in which the clips from that video is taken.



Questions: What are the possibilities for analyzing and finding the videos in which the clips are taken? If there are, can you please tell me how to do this if it is possible?



Because, there’s a YouTube video which I need to analyze it and find the videos in which the clips from that video is taken and made it as a trailer.



Hopefully I have codify it and write in a proper manner this time.



P.S.I know I have asked the same question as the previous one. I tried to edit it but, it didn’t let me not even to delete it because it is locked. But please don’t consider it as off topic. Just ignore the previous one.










share|improve this question















put on hold as too broad by n8te, Toto, DavidPostill 19 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.















  • You likely won't be able to. You'd need to build identifiers for the source material and check the trailer for those identifiers. As such you'd already need to know what that trailer might contain.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth identifiers? What’s that?
    – Alex A
    yesterday










  • That would depend on what you do. Building a hash for single frames - as it's reencoded it's unreliable. Building a scanner to find frames with sufficient similarity. Using more than frame at a time etc. there is a lot that would go into it. A lot of it would depend on your needed quality of the results. Account for false positives etc.. Essentially what you're trying to do sounds like what YouTube already does with ContentID. The reverse approach would be to take something from the trailer and check every other existing YouTube video for it.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth yes exactly what I’m trying to do. Because there’s a video which I can’t remember how it is called and I found a clip from it i a video trailer. And I wish I can watch it one more.
    – Alex A
    yesterday













up vote
-1
down vote

favorite









up vote
-1
down vote

favorite











I have found a YouTube video that has some clips take from different video clips and added into one video and made it be as a trailer.



I want to know what are the possibilities of analyzing such videos for finding the the videos in which the clips from that video is taken.



Questions: What are the possibilities for analyzing and finding the videos in which the clips are taken? If there are, can you please tell me how to do this if it is possible?



Because, there’s a YouTube video which I need to analyze it and find the videos in which the clips from that video is taken and made it as a trailer.



Hopefully I have codify it and write in a proper manner this time.



P.S.I know I have asked the same question as the previous one. I tried to edit it but, it didn’t let me not even to delete it because it is locked. But please don’t consider it as off topic. Just ignore the previous one.










share|improve this question















I have found a YouTube video that has some clips take from different video clips and added into one video and made it be as a trailer.



I want to know what are the possibilities of analyzing such videos for finding the the videos in which the clips from that video is taken.



Questions: What are the possibilities for analyzing and finding the videos in which the clips are taken? If there are, can you please tell me how to do this if it is possible?



Because, there’s a YouTube video which I need to analyze it and find the videos in which the clips from that video is taken and made it as a trailer.



Hopefully I have codify it and write in a proper manner this time.



P.S.I know I have asked the same question as the previous one. I tried to edit it but, it didn’t let me not even to delete it because it is locked. But please don’t consider it as off topic. Just ignore the previous one.







youtube google-analytics analysis google-video






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edited 19 hours ago

























asked yesterday









Alex A

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put on hold as too broad by n8te, Toto, DavidPostill 19 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






put on hold as too broad by n8te, Toto, DavidPostill 19 hours ago


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • You likely won't be able to. You'd need to build identifiers for the source material and check the trailer for those identifiers. As such you'd already need to know what that trailer might contain.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth identifiers? What’s that?
    – Alex A
    yesterday










  • That would depend on what you do. Building a hash for single frames - as it's reencoded it's unreliable. Building a scanner to find frames with sufficient similarity. Using more than frame at a time etc. there is a lot that would go into it. A lot of it would depend on your needed quality of the results. Account for false positives etc.. Essentially what you're trying to do sounds like what YouTube already does with ContentID. The reverse approach would be to take something from the trailer and check every other existing YouTube video for it.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth yes exactly what I’m trying to do. Because there’s a video which I can’t remember how it is called and I found a clip from it i a video trailer. And I wish I can watch it one more.
    – Alex A
    yesterday


















  • You likely won't be able to. You'd need to build identifiers for the source material and check the trailer for those identifiers. As such you'd already need to know what that trailer might contain.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth identifiers? What’s that?
    – Alex A
    yesterday










  • That would depend on what you do. Building a hash for single frames - as it's reencoded it's unreliable. Building a scanner to find frames with sufficient similarity. Using more than frame at a time etc. there is a lot that would go into it. A lot of it would depend on your needed quality of the results. Account for false positives etc.. Essentially what you're trying to do sounds like what YouTube already does with ContentID. The reverse approach would be to take something from the trailer and check every other existing YouTube video for it.
    – Seth
    yesterday










  • @Seth yes exactly what I’m trying to do. Because there’s a video which I can’t remember how it is called and I found a clip from it i a video trailer. And I wish I can watch it one more.
    – Alex A
    yesterday
















You likely won't be able to. You'd need to build identifiers for the source material and check the trailer for those identifiers. As such you'd already need to know what that trailer might contain.
– Seth
yesterday




You likely won't be able to. You'd need to build identifiers for the source material and check the trailer for those identifiers. As such you'd already need to know what that trailer might contain.
– Seth
yesterday












@Seth identifiers? What’s that?
– Alex A
yesterday




@Seth identifiers? What’s that?
– Alex A
yesterday












That would depend on what you do. Building a hash for single frames - as it's reencoded it's unreliable. Building a scanner to find frames with sufficient similarity. Using more than frame at a time etc. there is a lot that would go into it. A lot of it would depend on your needed quality of the results. Account for false positives etc.. Essentially what you're trying to do sounds like what YouTube already does with ContentID. The reverse approach would be to take something from the trailer and check every other existing YouTube video for it.
– Seth
yesterday




That would depend on what you do. Building a hash for single frames - as it's reencoded it's unreliable. Building a scanner to find frames with sufficient similarity. Using more than frame at a time etc. there is a lot that would go into it. A lot of it would depend on your needed quality of the results. Account for false positives etc.. Essentially what you're trying to do sounds like what YouTube already does with ContentID. The reverse approach would be to take something from the trailer and check every other existing YouTube video for it.
– Seth
yesterday












@Seth yes exactly what I’m trying to do. Because there’s a video which I can’t remember how it is called and I found a clip from it i a video trailer. And I wish I can watch it one more.
– Alex A
yesterday




@Seth yes exactly what I’m trying to do. Because there’s a video which I can’t remember how it is called and I found a clip from it i a video trailer. And I wish I can watch it one more.
– Alex A
yesterday















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