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Study Says P2P Downloaders Buy More Music

An anonymous reader writes "Michael Geist posts to his site about a study commissioned by the Canadian government intended to look into the buying habits of music fans. What the study found is that 'there is a positive correlation between peer-to-peer downloading and CD purchasing.' The report is entitled The Impact of Music Downloads and P2P File-Sharing on the Purchase of Music: A Study For Industry Canada, and it was 'conducted collaboratively by two professors from the University of London, Industry Canada, and Decima Research, who surveyed over 2,000 Canadians on their music downloading and purchasing habits. The authors believe this is the first ever empirical study to employ representative microeconomic data.'"

2 of 158 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Bias in the study? by butterwise · · Score: 3, Funny

    I do buy 2-3x the merchandise at gigs that I use to. I really doubt I'm in the minority... and I hope the large record labels die because of it.

    Maybe Sony would start making decent hardware again....
    Either that or really cool t-shirts and glow-sticks.
    --
    If a baby duck is a "duckling," why would anyone want to eat "dumplings?"
  2. Does this mean... by adsl · · Score: 5, Funny

    Does this correlation finding mean that the RIAA should pursue and find reasons to sue people who don't use P2P, because thse are the very people NOT buying CDs?