Tell HN: Chrome says "suspicious download" when trying to download yt-dlp

by joering2 100 comments 311 points
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100 comments

[−] asveikau 45d ago
The heuristics powering this, as well as the Windows Defender whitelisting, are terrible.

My understanding is that a specific binary needs to become popular for it to stop being flagged. This creates a chicken and egg problem. Users are not incentivized to use the program with the warning. But removing the warning requires many people to ignore the warning.

This is a big problem for anyone writing Windows software. An indie developer or small open source project is not going to do well with this.

[−] csomar 45d ago
I found out a similar thing with my website being blocked by corporate firewalls. You need to create profiles at these cyber companies and then wait for whitelisting so that they can drop the ban.
[−] raxxorraxor 45d ago
This is also what I call bullshit security. These mechanisms are designed to chain developers to infrastructure of the OS provider. Apple does the same shit for that matter.
[−] jasomill 44d ago
Does Microsoft get kickbacks from code signing certificate vendors?

Because AFAIK SmartScreen only applies to software downloaded outside the Microsoft Store.

Come to think of it, I suppose it does incentivize distribution through the Store, so you make a good point.

[−] whateverboat 45d ago
This is also happening on linux for me.
[−] gruez 45d ago

>My understanding is that a specific binary needs to become popular for it to stop being flagged. This creates a chicken and egg problem.

Given the recent npm axios compromise this sounds like a pretty smart move?

[−] Frotag 45d ago
Conveniently M$ lets you buy a signing certificate to fix this.

https://stackoverflow.com/questions/48946680/how-to-avoid-th...

[−] john_strinlai 45d ago
for what it is worth, when downloading the latest .exe from github, firefox says "this file is not commonly downloaded" and i have to select "allow download".

scans of it are fine.

probably just a heuristic-based false-positive, and not a news-worthy story of chrome abusing their monopoly or whatever.

[−] jddecker 45d ago
The binaries they offer are complied using PyInstaller, which can give false positives in anti virus software.
[−] alsetmusic 45d ago
Reminds me of how Bing search for Google takes people to a page meant to resemble Google.com. Can't trust huge companies.

But as others have pointed out, it's probably a coincidence in this case. But who knows.

[−] cvhc 45d ago
I can reproduce when downloading https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/releases/download/2026.03.1.... But it did provide a line of explanation:

Dangerous download blocked yt-dlp_win_x86.zip is not commonly downloaded and may be dangerous. [Discard] [Keep]

[−] matheusmoreira 45d ago
Which is why I download it from my Linux distribution's package manager. It's available on Termux too.
[−] eis 45d ago
Which link exactly did you try to use? Or what specific version on the Github releases page? I checked both the latest windows and macos versions against Google Safe Browsing and all were fine.
[−] ompogUe 45d ago
So, Google's browser says downloading a tool to download files from Google's servers is "Suspicious"? Not surprising.
[−] faangguyindia 45d ago
It's funny such a big corporations can't let such a small tool live.

Google is such an evil company, it is not even provided anything great anymore.

Anti-gravity paid plans suck, GCP is billing heavy. Today google sucks at most things

Their Android playstore hardly updates statistics once a day, so much for such a big data company with unlimited sources lol

[−] throwaway85825 45d ago
Clear conflict of interest enabled by anti trust not being enforced.
[−] Meekro 45d ago
I tried to reproduce this on their download page for the latest release[1]. Only the windows exe gets the warning, the other releases (macos, linux, etc) all download just fine. That makes me think it's an automated system that messed up, not an attempt at anticompetitive behavior.

[1] https://github.com/yt-dlp/yt-dlp/releases/tag/2026.03.17

[−] lofaszvanitt 45d ago
Chrome is just ridiculous. It pretends you are mentally handicapped

Ooooh, this is an executable, THAT'S VERY DANGEROUS! Are you sure you want to download it? Hmmmph?

[−] jesse23 45d ago
brew install yt-dlp or scoop install yt-dlp :)
[−] jfoster 33d ago
Suspicion is in the eye of the beholder.
[−] closetkantian 42d ago
I find the "unverified download" thing in Chrome so annoying, too. Remember when computers used to treat us like adults? I miss those days.
[−] simon-b 45d ago
As an aside, yt-dlp presents a perfect use-case for uvx (part of uv):

  uvx yt-dlp 
No manual download/install required.
[−] uoaei 45d ago
Chrome and YouTube are both owned by Google. There's an obvious reason why they want to discourage use of that extension.
[−] ddtaylor 45d ago
Linux user here unaffected as I get it straight from my command line.
[−] nnevatie 45d ago
You wouldn't download a downloader.
[−] waffletower 45d ago
Chrome for work, Safari or Arc for everything else. I envy you if your use of yt-dlp is work related.
[−] mediumsmart 44d ago
Nothing new here. Chrome has always been a suspicious download.
[−] NiloCK 45d ago
Interesting to inspect any telemetry on this. Could end up on a list.
[−] ryguz 41d ago
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[−] unmayx 43d ago
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[−] MarcelinoGMX3C 44d ago
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[−] sleepybrett 45d ago
break this shit up, break all of this shit up.

Google needs to be at least what four companies.. gcp, youtube, search, workspaces...

Apple needs to be at least two hardware/os, music/tv+

Microsoft, meta, etc, Monopolies are bad and our SEC/FTC/Government is doing a poor job of controlling them. At least as equally trecherous are these businesses that overly vertically integrate... anyways, we're fucked.

[−] rdevilla 45d ago
It's over. The internet culture of the 20th and early 21st century has been appropriated for profit.
[−] socalgal2 45d ago
This entire thread it almost entirely proof that HN is now reddit. No facts, no consideration, just accusation and crowd think

> Comments should get more thoughtful and substantive, not less, as a topic gets more divisive.

none of that here

> Don't be curmudgeonly. Thoughtful criticism is fine, but please don't be rigidly or generically negative.

not followed here

> Please respond to the strongest plausible interpretation of what someone says, not a weaker one that's easier to criticize. Assume good faith.

none of that there

> Eschew flamebait. Avoid generic tangents. Omit internet tropes.

Lots of that here

The system is clearly automated. As others have pointed out, they've been able to download without incident. As other have also pointed out, Firefox also warns. The warning is reasonable, claiming that something isn't downloaded often is true, until it isn't. A few more downloads and the warning will likely go away.

Nothing to see here except a Google hater mis-interpreting something and the posting ragebait.