Is It Actually Legal to Download a Social Media Video
Everyone wonders this. Nobody asks it. You see a clip on TikTok, you want to keep it, and there's this quiet background anxiety about whether you're technically breaking a rule. So let's just answer it properly.
Downloading for personal use sits in a grey area legally — but it's a grey area that basically nobody ever gets in trouble for. Courts have been wrestling with the concept of "personal copying" for decades. Long before the internet, people recorded TV shows on VCRs and cassette players. That got challenged legally. It was eventually accepted as fair use in most places. Saving a social media video to your phone is not fundamentally different. You're not selling it. You're not broadcasting it. You're just keeping a copy.
Where the line gets clear is what happens after. Taking someone's video and reposting it as your own? Different situation entirely. Using it in an ad, selling it, or making money off it without permission? That's where copyright law actually has teeth. The creator made it. They own it. Downloading it privately doesn't transfer any of that.
Platforms frame this in their terms of service, and they make it sound serious. But here's the thing — terms of service aren't laws. Violating them might get your account flagged or banned. It doesn't make you a criminal. The two are completely separate things, and platforms know this. They write these terms to protect themselves and to keep you inside their apps, not because downloading a recipe video is genuinely illegal.
Short version: personal use, low risk, widely tolerated everywhere. The moment you start distributing, selling, or monetising something you downloaded — that's when it matters. MyVideoCity's Terms of Service are clear on this: it's a personal use tool, full stop.
Why Your Videos Look Worse After Uploading to Instagram or TikTok
You filmed something. It looked great on your phone. You uploaded it. Now it looks like you shot it through a shower screen. Your phone didn't break. You didn't do anything wrong. This is Instagram doing this on purpose — and they're not even sorry about it.
Every major platform compresses video on upload. They have to. Storing and serving video to billions of people costs an enormous amount of money, and compression keeps those costs manageable. From their side it's a business decision. From your side it's your carefully shot footage turned into a smeared mess.
Instagram is particularly aggressive. Upload something at 1080p and it often gets served back at a noticeably lower bitrate. Same resolution label, less actual visual information per second. Fast movement, fine detail, text — anything that requires a lot of data to encode cleanly gets hit hardest. TikTok does something similar, and there's a quirk worth knowing: videos uploaded over a slow connection sometimes get compressed even more heavily than the same file uploaded over fast Wi-Fi. I've tested this. The difference is real.
What does this mean when you download something? When you grab a video through MyVideoCity, you're getting the version the platform kept — not the original from the creator's camera roll. That original is gone from the moment they hit upload. What you get is the best quality the platform decided to store. Usually still very watchable, just not the pristine source file.
If you're a creator and this bothers you — it should — the only real solution is keeping your originals somewhere that isn't a social platform. Camera roll, Google Photos, an external drive, anything. Social media is for sharing. It's not an archive. Don't treat it like one.
Videos Disappear More Often Than You Think — and Without Warning
Here's the thing people always underestimate. You see something, you think "I'll come back to this later," and later it's just gone. No notification. No broken link message. Just nothing where the post used to be.
This happens constantly and most of it is out of your hands. The creator deleted it — people do this for all kinds of reasons. The platform took it down. The account got suspended. The video was set to private. Any of these can happen overnight, and none of them come with advance notice.
On X, formerly Twitter, viral footage disappears especially fast. Eyewitness clips, news moments, sports incidents — these get removed within hours of going viral, either because the poster gets cold feet, because X's moderation catches something, or because someone sends a takedown. I've gone back for a clip the next morning and found nothing. It's genuinely frustrating when you needed it.
Instagram Stories are the most obvious case of designed impermanence — 24 hours and gone. But regular posts and Reels disappear too. I bookmarked a recipe video once, went back a week later, account still active, but the specific post just didn't exist anymore. No explanation. If I'd saved it the first time I wouldn't have had to spend twenty minutes trying to find the same recipe somewhere else.
Facebook is arguably the worst for this kind of loss. Community pages go dormant, local businesses close, event pages get deleted. Videos that documented real moments — a fundraiser, a local performance, a neighbourhood thing — just vanish when the page owner stops maintaining it. There's no archive. There's no recovery option. Once it's gone, it's gone.
The only reliable fix is saving what matters when you see it. Not later. Now. MyVideoCity is built exactly for this. You see something. You paste the link. You download it. From that point, it doesn't matter what happens to the original post — you've already got it. Creator deletes it, platform removes it, account disappears — none of that touches the file on your device.
For platform-specific saving guides, see our articles on saving TikTok videos, downloading Instagram Reels, getting X (Twitter) videos, and downloading Facebook content.