I vote to close these sorts of questions, and usually downvote as well. Here's why:
Typical Question:
How do I scrape YouTube videos and turn them into MP3?
Not only does this violate the YouTube terms of service and encourages copyright violation, but it's simply too broad. The question isn't properly asked nor broken down.
Better Question:
How can I fetch the HTML of a page?
How can I parse the HTML of a page?
How can I search the DOM for elements referencing media resources?
How can I efficiently stream a large file from my HTTP client in (framework here) to disk?
How do I convert media from one format to another, stripping video tracks in the process?
Had someone asked these questions, not only are they totally appropriate for Stack Overflow, but they avoid the issue of copyright and terms of service entirely. The questions then become useful for their technical merit, and can be used as reference for any similar purposes.
Even if the person asking the question didn't know how to break the problem down, the fact that they wanted to scrape from YouTube is completely irrelevant to the problem being solved. They could have asked how to break down the problem of scraping HTML and saving the media at a minimum.
I downvote these bad questions because they're fairly useless, and the people asking them are lazy. Lazy people don't typically want to learn, they want a shortcut. I choose to spend my time on Stack Overflow helping people so that they can learn and help others. The best lesson to teach beginning programmers is how to ask good questions. Closing their bad questions and leaving a comment explaining why is an efficient way to teach this lesson.