- Legal and Terms of Service Context
- Understanding DRM: Why Some Recordings Show Black Screens
- Which Streaming Sites Can Be Recorded
- Recording YouTube Videos
- Recording Twitch Streams
- Recording Your Own Video Content From Other Platforms
- Alternatives to Screen Recording for Streaming Video
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Legal and Terms of Service Context
- Understanding DRM: Why Some Recordings Show Black Screens
- Which Streaming Sites Can Be Recorded
- Recording YouTube Videos
- Recording Twitch Streams
- Recording Your Own Video Content From Other Platforms
- Alternatives to Screen Recording for Streaming Video
- Frequently Asked Questions
Recording streaming video sounds straightforward — but whether it works depends entirely on whether the streaming service uses Digital Rights Management (DRM) technology. This guide explains the technical reality, which platforms are recordable, and what limitations exist so you can make informed decisions about what to attempt.
Record Streaming Video Without DRM Protection
Screen Recorder Pro captures any browser-based video that isn't DRM-protected — Twitch streams, YouTube videos, Vimeo content, and thousands of other streaming sites.
Add to Chrome — FreeLegal and Terms of Service Context
Before the technical details, understand the legal and ToS landscape:
Copyright Law and Personal Use
In the United States, the concept of "time-shifting" — recording broadcast content to watch later for personal use — was upheld by the Supreme Court in Sony Corp. V. Universal City Studios (1984). This established that recording TV broadcasts for personal home viewing was fair use. However, the application of this precedent to streaming services, especially those requiring a subscription, is legally contested territory.
Terms of Service
Virtually every streaming platform's Terms of Service explicitly prohibits recording their content. Violating ToS isn't the same as copyright infringement, but it does give the platform grounds to terminate your account. For subscription services, this means losing access to the content you've paid for.
Understanding DRM: Why Some Recordings Show Black Screens
DRM (Digital Rights Management) is a technical system that controls how protected content can be used. Major streaming services use Widevine DRM (Google), FairPlay (Apple), or PlayReady (Microsoft) to protect their video streams.
How Widevine DRM Blocks Recording
Widevine DRM operates through a chain of trust:
- The streaming service checks that your browser supports Widevine
- Video frames are decrypted only in a secure hardware or software environment
- The video is rendered directly to the display adapter, bypassing normal software layers
- Any screen capture API requesting those pixels receives a black frame — the OS-level permission system blocks the read
This protection works at the operating system level, below where browser extensions operate. Chrome extensions use the browser's capture API, which respects the OS-level protected content flag. This is why no browser extension can record Netflix — the block isn't in the browser, it's in the OS graphics subsystem.
Which Streaming Sites Can Be Recorded
| Platform | DRM? | Recordable? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Netflix | Yes (Widevine) | No — black screen | Hardware DRM in most modes |
| Disney+ | Yes (Widevine) | No — black screen | Same DRM tech as Netflix |
| Amazon Prime Video | Yes (Widevine) | No — black screen | Widevine on web |
| HBO Max / Max | Yes (Widevine) | No — black screen | Protected content |
| Hulu | Yes (Widevine) | No — black screen | Protected on web |
| YouTube (regular) | No | Yes | Most content unprotected |
| YouTube Premium content | Some yes | Partial | Some movies have DRM |
| Twitch | No | Yes | HLS streams, no DRM |
| Vimeo | No (usually) | Yes (usually) | Private videos may restrict |
| Facebook/Instagram Live | No | Yes | No DRM on live streams |
| News site videos | No (usually) | Yes | Standard HTML5 video |
| Course platforms (Udemy etc.) | Varies | Varies | Check platform |
| ESPN+, Peacock | Yes | No | Sports streaming uses DRM |
Recording YouTube Videos
YouTube videos (standard, uploaded content) can be recorded with a screen recorder. However, YouTube's Terms of Service prohibit downloading or recording videos without permission, with exceptions for content that YouTube itself offers a download option for (Premium downloads) or content you own.
For personal reference recordings of YouTube content, a screen recorder works technically. The practical considerations:
- Use 1080p or higher quality playback before recording for best results
- Full screen mode gives the cleanest recording without UI elements
- Tab audio capture gets the video's audio cleanly without system sound contamination
- Pause auto-play ads: wait for them to finish or skip before starting your recording
Recording Twitch Streams
Twitch live streams are one of the most common screen recording use cases. Unlike premium streaming services, Twitch uses standard HLS (HTTP Live Streaming) without DRM. Screen recorders capture Twitch without issues.
Settings for Recording Twitch
Recording Your Own Video Content From Other Platforms
If you've uploaded videos to a platform and want to retrieve them as local recordings — for backup or repurposing — screen recording is a valid approach when direct download isn't available. This is clearly within your rights as the content creator.
Use cases where recording your own hosted content makes sense:
- Platform is shutting down and you want local copies of uploaded content
- Content is on a platform that doesn't offer download (some CMSes)
- You need a specific segment from a longer hosted video
Record Any Non-DRM Browser Video
Screen Recorder Pro captures any browser-based video your browser can play — Twitch, YouTube, Vimeo, news sites, educational platforms. No black screens on non-DRM content.
Add to Chrome — FreeAlternatives to Screen Recording for Streaming Video
When screen recording doesn't work or isn't appropriate, consider:
- Official download features: Netflix, Amazon Prime, Disney+, and YouTube Premium all offer offline viewing in their mobile apps or desktop apps — legally, within their platform
- Screen-cast to a recording device: Record a physical screen using a camera (legally grey, practically poor quality)
- Watch during a valid subscription period: The content is available when you need it without recording if you maintain the subscription
- Check if content is available DRM-free: Some content available on streaming platforms is also available DRM-free from other sources (official author websites, Internet Archive, legitimate download stores)
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I record Netflix or other streaming services?
Netflix and most premium streaming services use Widevine DRM that actively blocks screen recording at the OS level. Attempts to record Netflix using Chrome's tab capture or browser extensions will result in a black screen — this is by design, not a bug in the recorder. It operates below the browser layer and cannot be bypassed by extensions.
What streaming sites can I record?
Sites without DRM: Twitch live streams, most YouTube content, Vimeo (non-DRM), news site videos, most educational platforms, and general HTML5 video players. Any video served as a standard HTML5 video element without DRM encryption can be captured by a screen recorder.
Is it legal to record streaming video for personal use?
Legality varies by jurisdiction. In the US, personal-use time-shifting has legal precedent. However, platform Terms of Service universally prohibit recording, and redistribution or commercial use of recorded content is copyright infringement. The personal use question is legally contested for subscription streaming services specifically.
Why does screen recording show a black screen on Netflix?
Netflix uses Widevine DRM, which marks video frames as protected content at the OS level. The operating system blocks any screen capture API from reading those pixels, producing a black rectangle. This protection is below the browser layer and cannot be bypassed by browser extensions — it requires direct hardware DRM support.
Can I record Twitch streams?
Yes. Twitch live streams use standard HLS delivery without DRM protection, so browser-based screen recorders capture them effectively. Check the streamer's channel rules first — some explicitly prohibit recording. Use "Source" quality in Twitch's settings for the best recording quality.