Http Error 403: Forbidden Retrying Fragment ^hot^ | Yt-dlp

Use a VPN or proxy consistent with the manifest’s geolocation. 5. Server-side fragment corruption The manifest points to a fragment that no longer exists or was not generated correctly.

yt-dlp -v URL 2>&1 | grep -i "403" Extract the failing fragment URL and try fetching it manually with curl using the same cookies/headers: yt-dlp http error 403: forbidden retrying fragment

This error occurs when receives a 403 Forbidden response from the server while trying to download a video fragment (part of a DASH or HLS stream), usually after the initial download of the video/audio manifests succeeded. Common Causes & Solutions 1. Token / URL expiration Many streaming services issue temporary, signed URLs for fragments. If the initial manifest download took too long, or the fragments are requested slowly, the URLs may expire. Use a VPN or proxy consistent with the

# Skip the problematic fragment and continue yt-dlp --fragment-retries infinite --skip-unavailable-fragments URL Add verbose logging to see exact failing URL: yt-dlp -v URL 2>&1 | grep -i "403"

# Force re-download of manifest before each fragment yt-dlp --force-keyframes-at-cuts --retry-sleep fragment:2 URL yt-dlp --retry-sleep http:5 --fragment-retries 10 URL 2. Rate limiting / anti-bot protection The server detects too many rapid fragment requests and blocks further access.