7

Background:

I am developing a web-based teaching program (using Drupal 7, if that matters) that requires users to view educational videos sequentially. I want to make sure they view each video in its entirety before gaining access to the next one. I'm pretty unfamiliar with the YouTube API but I combed through the PHP developer's guide and didn't find any information about how to do this.

I'm open to any reasonable way of accomplishing this. I was thinking that checking whether one or two random timecodes were hit, as well as whether the movie finished playing, would make it reasonably difficult to skip ahead without watching the video.

So to accomplish this I need to figure out two things:

  1. How to let the server know when the video being viewed has hit the selected timecodes, and
  2. How to let the server know when the end of the video has been reached.

If someone could point me in the right direction I'd greatly appreciate.

10
  • 7
    This is a brutally awful thing to do to your users, but I guess you could include the link to the next video as one of those horrible clickable annotations at the end of each video?
    – user229044
    May 9, 2012 at 15:47
  • I actually wrote something similar for audio files. You should look into writing a custom javascript html video player or a flash video player.
    – Sam Dufel
    May 9, 2012 at 15:47
  • @meagar — I need to assign roles based on whether the video has been watched, so I need the server itself to be able to be told about the event.
    – beth
    May 9, 2012 at 15:52
  • @Sam Dufel — That sounds like a pretty heavy solution. Do you really think that using the YouTube API for this is not going to be possible/worth the effort, AND that there isn't a free, open-source video player that would do this? I'm fine with doing more work, but I have a feeling I'd be reinventing the wheel. And I'd still need to know how to get the info out about timecodes.
    – beth
    May 9, 2012 at 15:55
  • 1
    @Pier-alexandreBouchard They don't necessarily need to be random, as long as they aren't known to the end-user.
    – beth
    May 9, 2012 at 16:02

6 Answers 6

3

All you need to do is ping your server when the video player has reached the end (or near the end) of the media file.

You can either write your own (javascript or flash) video player or modify one of the existing ones. This technique won't work with the HTML5 <video> tag.

3
  • How? I think you can do this with the Youtube API May 9, 2012 at 15:53
  • Thanks! Do you have any information about how to trigger the ping? Is that something I missed in the API/Dev guide, or is there other documentation about it somewhere? Also, is this something that can only be done at the end of the video, or can pre-selected timecodes also trigger a ping?
    – beth
    May 9, 2012 at 15:54
  • If you ping near/at the end to verify that user has watched the complete video, anybody will just jump to the end. No? May 9, 2012 at 15:56
1

With the youtube api you can 'ping the server'

  function onPlayerStateChange(evt) {       
       if (evt.data == 0){
       alert (player.getDuration())
     }
 }

You can then get the duration of the clip. Further use of the api - timing when the user starts and stops should allow you you to work out the time said user spent viewing the clip. Compare this to the duration and if it matches ( or is close enough) trigger the reward.

https://developers.google.com/youtube/js_api_reference

1
  • Please consider adding logic for player.getPlaybackRate() since this will affect how long a user will spend watching the video.
    – Tiris
    May 17, 2018 at 15:51
1

The Flash and JavaScript Player API references include functions for getting Playback Status, in particular:

player.getCurrentTime():Number
Returns the elapsed time in seconds since the video started playing.

I was looking through the wrong API references, but eventually found it. Yay.

1

I've been working on something quite similar, and I've decided to go with a custom player using the iframe api https://developers.google.com/youtube/iframe_api_reference and remove the default chrome, which keeps them from skipping forward.

// api has been loaded
function onYouTubeIframeAPIReady(){
    var player = new YT.Player(el, {
        videoId: video_id,
        width: 700,
        playerVars: {
            controls: 0,
            modestbranding: 1,
            rel: 0              
        }, 
        events: {
            onStateChange: function(d){
                switch(d.data){
                    case YT.PlayerState.ENDED:
                        // send notification of video ended
                }
            }
        }
    });
}

    // async load of api
var tag = document.createElement('script');
tag.src = "//www.youtube.com/iframe_api";
var firstScriptTag = document.getElementsByTagName('script')[0];
firstScriptTag.parentNode.insertBefore(tag, firstScriptTag);

The function is called when the youtube api is fully loaded and is setting up the iframe player. el is the dom object you want to replace with the video, and video_id is the id of the video you would like to load. controls: 0 is the magic bit that hides the player chrome. Then in the onStateChange function you could send off an ajax request, or change your layout or whatever it is you need to do at the end of the video.

1

If you use html5 and JavaScript, you can natively check to see if the entire video or certain portions have been played.

Html5's video API keeps track of all the time ranges that have been played. Take a look at the docs for the <video>.played attribute and the TimeRanges class.

0

Put up an authentication link at the end of the video; use the link as a way to verify that they collected a token. This will not solve the problem of check-points, and the viewer could press play and walk away, but that could happen with checkpoints.

Youtube videos can have links inserted during the course using the annotation feature in the uploader interface. Combine a coded link in an annotation during the last fifteen seconds or so with your site's user authentication to create a server-side credential.

1
  • 1
    I can see that being part of a solution but it still doesn't prevent skipping to the end. I also don't think having the website find out from the video whether that link has been displayed would be significantly easier or more effective than using API calls.
    – beth
    May 9, 2012 at 19:03

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.