> it probably wouldn't work anyway, unless youtube really did use a consistent url domain name for their content delivery network..< Not correct. It is possible to cache youtubes content using StoreID. Additionally, locking the resolution is much more trivial, as the requested youtube-URL contains the requested resolution as one of the &...& pars. Just needs modification. I run a free youtube proxy myself, for years already, and also do the "resolution locking" myself, to low res, to avoid overload of the proxy. -- View this message in context: http://squid-web-proxy-cache.1019090.n4.nabble.com/YouTube-Resolution-Locker-tp4667042p4667064.html Sent from the Squid - Users mailing list archive at Nabble.com.