Legal Beats Piracy, Study Finds, Except In 'Three-Strikes' France

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  • admin
    Administrator
    • Nov 2001
    • 8954

    Legal Beats Piracy, Study Finds, Except In 'Three-Strikes' France

    A new study by a London research company has found that, in countries where legal music streaming or downloading options are more commonly available, BitTorrent music piracy is actually decreasing, while in countries with fewer options, the piracy rate is still rising.

    The Digital Music Index (DMI) report compiled by Musicmetric found that of the 10 countries that had the biggest increase in BitTorrent usage for illegal music downloads, only one of those countries had access to Spotify.

    But in the top 10 countries that saw decreasing BitTorrent usage, five had access to the same free (or low cost) music streaming service.

    The DMI report concludes that free or low-cost legitimate options may be successfully taking on piracy, something that executives at Spotify have been claiming all along.

    Interestingly, the only country that had access to Spotify, but actually saw BitTorrent usage rise, was the country that has one of the toughest set of anti-piracy laws in Europe: France. France's controversial "three-strikes" Hadopi regime sets out to specifically target BitTorrent users, monitoring their activities, warning them of alleged copyright infringement, and eventually issuing a fine and a Internet ban for those caught for the third time. But despite these efforts, and the presence of Spotify, BitTorrent usage is rising in France, the 5th fastest in the world.
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  • drfsupercenter
    NOT an online superstore
    • Oct 2005
    • 4424

    #2
    What I really want is a legal source of lossless audio (like FLAC, m4a lossless, uncompressed WAV, whatever). I continue to buy the actual discs so I can rip them myself, because I hate lossy compression and really don't like the idea of pouring money into something like iTunes where the files aren't really CD quality.

    If someone ever makes one of those, you can bet I'll be one of their biggest customers
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    • admin
      Administrator
      • Nov 2001
      • 8954

      #3
      That's a good idea. Video (via Blu-ray) already has studio reference level/masters audio, so it does seem a bit strange that lossless music isn't more popular. I guess it's a hardware issue, and you can just imagine the RIAA suits saying no to the idea because they think it will make it easier for people to upload even higher quality pirated songs online.
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      • drfsupercenter
        NOT an online superstore
        • Oct 2005
        • 4424

        #4
        It's not really even that, because people already DO. You can just google "[name of album] flac download" and find links all over the place.

        I stick to buying physical CDs for the most part because I can rip them as lossless (which, hey, doesn't the RIAA still say that's illegal?)

        But I like the concept of buying just one song at a time - and I have used iTunes if I'm in a hurry for that song I just have to have - but hate the quality of it.
        CYA Later:

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