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Illegal music downloads rise

Listeners undeterred by threat of prosecution

  • Andrea-Marie Vassou
  • News
  • Web
  • 31/07/2007

The number of people illegally downloading music is increasing, according to a report by Entertainment Media Research.

In its fourth annual Digital Music Survey, the music research consultancy found that just under half of the 1,700 people it questioned were illegally downloading music tracks.

This was a third more that 2006 and 40 per cent more than in 2005. Legal downloading was also found to be in decline. According to the research, it fell from 40 per cent in 2006 to 15 per cent this year.

Young people were found to be the worst culprits with one in five 18 to 24 year-olds admitting to illegally downloading music, compared to just over a tenth of those aged between 25 and 34. Men were also found to be the most dishonest with just under half admitting to illegally downloading music as opposed to 40 per cent of women.

The research also highlighted the fact illegal downloading was set to increase after nearly one in five respondents claimed they would continue to download unauthorised tracks, despite the threat of prosecution.

The price of legal downloads was cited by Entertainment Media Research as the key factor for this after 84 per cent of those questioned said that older digital downloads should be cheaper to buy than new releases.

It urged the industry to make “legal buying easier and cheaper”, to stop the increase in this crime.

John Enser, head of music at law firm Olswang, agreed. He said: "As illegal downloading hits an all-time high and consumers' fear of prosecution falls, the music industry must look for more ways to encourage the public to download music legally."

However, music industry association the BPI disagreed with the research claiming that both legal and illegal downloads had risen within the past year as a result of a 25 per cent growth in broadband penetration.

A spokesman for the BPI told Computeractive: “The download industry has grown from being 100 per cent illegal to 25 per cent legal since it began.

“Although we are aware illegal music downloads are growing it is also encouraging to see that there are people out there who are driving the growth of legal downloads.”

He called for better protection against piracy and copyright from internet service providers, which it said must act as “gatekeepers”, and the Government, which should take on the role of “legislators” to tackle copyright theft in the UK.

“Consumers must also understand that by downloading songs free they are denying an artist of money and rights which could cause the industry to collapse,” he added.

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Reader Comments

If everyone does it----

Maybe it is time for the recording industry to wake-up and realise that they are charging too much for the music. when you look at how much money the recording industry has...and then they sit around whining because joe low income student did not pay for the music he is listening to, to me it is just pathetic...I think it is time to redo the recording industry thing....

Posted by JAS, 31 Jul 2007

Give us a real option and choice

Legal digital downloads feel like a half sale. We are beginning to see that when we purchase a cd or dvd we don't really get what we think we should. Most people would like to think they are buying the right to listen/watch the work in question. It has become apparent that we are only buying the right to listen/watch to that 'particular copy' of the item. I think this passed up by previously and sticks in the throat now DRM makes it apparent. To make people be legal you need to do three things:- 1. Keep a record of what we purchase so if our IPod/HDD goes down we haven't wasted all our money. 2. When you buy something you should own it, not have it at the copyright holders discretion (only that version i.e no remakes or mixes) 3. Allow us to play it on what we want. That includes converting it so we can put our hi-def 2gig download onto our mobile or psp if we want. This would still enable the studios to milk us with their special compilations and remixes, people expect to pay for that, but would help us feel we are getting what we want and not just being milked at every twist of the industry's tail.

Posted by Fred Davies, 31 Jul 2007

   

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