@alyx opus I believe
@matrix
No, not what gets delivered to you after Youtube transcodes stuff, but what the person uploaded in originally. Basically what they outputed in their video editor.
@alyx oh, that info is probable gone
@matrix
I'm particularly interested in 1 Youtube channel that has a few music albums uploaded.
I know that opus, even at YouTube's bitrate, is great quality. Basically transparent, so I would want to rip one of those albums. But if the original encode was a bad mp3, then I wouldn't bother.
In this particular case, I was able to test a different song, compare it against a flac I have and transcodes from that flac to mp3, aac and opus. From looking at the spectograms (best use I ever get out of Audacity) it looks like the Youtube version was transcoded directly from lossless. Don't see either aac or mp3 artifacts.
@alyx @matrix probably better to try and find a torrent of it. If it doesn't exist and you want higher quality, you'll just have to buy it. But honestly if you can't tell just listening on YouTube does it even matter? The resulting mp3 you'll get will be 128kbps anyway, I think 192 max. Not really worth the trouble if you can find it higher quality somewhere else.
@beardalaxy @matrix
>the resulting mp3
Not sure what you mean by that. I can rip opus directly from Youtube, and I keep it like that. Plays just fine on everything I need it on.
@alyx @matrix YouTube's audio after it gets compressed down is relatively low quality ("good enough"), so any way you try to pull for it won't be HQ. YouTube targets 160kbps vbr. If that's good enough for you then cool though :) there are a lot of unreleased/lost tracks I can only find on YouTube, so unfortunately that has to be the case sometimes.
@beardalaxy @matrix
Except YouTube does opus these days. Which not only kicks mp3's ass, but also aac's ass in quality. A 160kbps opus is transparent and indistinguishable from a lossless source even to audiophile nerds with the equipment and autism to care about their audio cables.
Youtube's targeted bitrate for opus doesn't reach 160kbps though (which is a weird bitrate you pulled out of nowhere, cause it never targeted that. It did used to target 192kbps aac, a very long time ago, but never 160). From what I've seen it just slightly overshoots 128kbps, which for opus is still fine and surpasses mp3.
Whatever knowledge you think you have about Youtube's codecs is either way out of date, or was always completely wrong. Today, Youtube doesn't have low quality, or good enough audio. It has GOOD audio. Not great, but good.
The only limitation to Youtube's audio is not their transcoding, but what you upload to it. If you decide to upload 96kbps mp3, then sure, your Youtube video will sound like shit. But if you decide to upload with lossless audio, usually FLAC, then your video will have good audio.
And there are ways to check an audio file for encoding artifacts, especially mp3 ones. So it's not that difficult to have an educated guess on whether an opus ripped from Youtube is an mp3 retranscoded to opus, or if it was transcoded direct from a lossless format.
@alyx @matrix for just straight music rips people upload, I can see it either being FLAC or 320kbps mp3. If they encode the video correctly, at least. They could toss a FLAC in a video and then only render out 128kbps. I've accidentally not rendered videos at 60fps before lol so that can always happen too. That's what I suspect most source files would be though, whether they are ripping from a CD or downloading from something like Amazon music.