Snaptube is an Android app which offers service to download videos and audios.  You can download videos and audios without any trouble.  It is a simple multimedia app that lets you download any video and audio from popular video and music sites, and even social media apps.  It offers video resolutions in a range of 144p, 720p, 1080p HD, 2k HD, 4K HD and audio formats in MP3 or M4A[1].

Who Owns Snaptube?

 Snaptube was developed by China’s Mobiuspace, which claims “100 million users per month around the world,” and names Tencent and China Growth Capital among its investors.

Which country made Snaptube App?

Snaptube app is made in China App.  It is ownd by Mobiuspace (A Chinese Company).

Why Snaptube is not on Google Play Store

A popular video downloader app for Android has been found generating fake ad clicks and unauthorized premium purchases from its users, according to a security firm. The app, developed in China, is not on Google Play because the app maker claims Google will not allow video downloader apps on the store.

Snaptube was first released in 2014 according to its official website.

Snaptube was installed by more than 40 million Android users around the world in 2019.

In 2019, Snaptube enhances its safety performance due to privacy issues. Some reports claim that its security has been verified by Lookout Security, McAfee and CM security.

Some third-party app stores estimate Snaptube has been downloaded more than a billion times to date.

Features and Trends

People use Snaptube to download videos ranging from 240P to 4K HD and download videos in multiple formats of MP3, MP4, M4A[4]. Apart from watching videos, users also stream music and save their favorite songs for offline listening.

Controversies

In 2019, Upstream warned that users are served invisible ads without their knowledge that run silently on the device, allowing the app maker to generate ad revenue at the expense of churning up a user’s mobile data and battery power.

After Google pulled the application from Play Store, the developer, Mobiuspace blamed a third-party software development kit called 'Mango SDK', with the developer claiming to have removed the offending SDK. The company promised it had taken “immediate action... and released an update which took Mango SDK off subsequent versions, as well as sending out notifications to all users to update to the latest version through in-app pushes and notifications."