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P2P Music Downloads At All-Time Low

RedEaredSlider writes "According to research group NPD Group, the shuttering of Limewire's music file sharing service has led to a similar decline in the usage of such services throughout the US. The number has gone from a high of 16 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007 to just nine percent in the fourth quarter of 2010, right after Limewire shut down its file-sharing services due to a court order, when a federal judge sided with the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)."

20 of 369 comments (clear)

  1. Give me good services by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most people I know stopped downloading music after Spotify came a few years ago. It's an awesome service, and I gladly pay the monthly fee for it. Others take the ad supported version. But all in all, it did wonders to stop piracy.

    The same can be said about Steam. I currently own over 250 games on Steam and I gladly buy more, as it's easy, fast and just works. Yeah yeah, Steam might go down in 500 years, but you know what, I don't care. It's great for me now and I probably won't be playing those games then, if they even work with that generations systems. And if I really want to play some classic again, there will always be (and even increasingly) services similar to Good Old Games and console stores that sell old games cheaply and modified to work with current systems.

    Those two services have come to a point where it's easier and better to buy than pirate. Now just give me the same for movies and TV and I'm set. And I wont be making any stupid comments about how music labels are ripping off hard working artists (while forgetting the artists signed that contract themself) or how some item you buy should still be working 1000 years from now, because frankly I don't care. I just want a good working service where I can throw my money and get the product quickly and easily.

    And on a related note, I just bought Crysis 2, Portal 2 and Assassins Creed: Brotherhood from Steam. All great games (AssBro has amazingly fun multiplayer where everyone have targets to kill while also being someone elses target).

    1. Re:Give me good services by Reapman · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Outside the US, use spotify"

      And for those of us outside Europe AND the US (such as Canada, although I'm sure other countries are in the same boat) NEITHER option works. However GrooveShark is a pretty good substitute I find..

  2. Crappy Music by denshao2 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There isn't much left to download.

  3. And... by redemtionboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Music sales suddenly skyrocket right? Right?? Oh, they're still abysmal. Never mind then.

  4. Re:In related news... by mcmonkey · · Score: 4, Funny

    Editors, can we get a story about the $75 trillion P2P lawsuit soon plz?

    No.

    http://yro.slashdot.org/story/11/03/23/1930238/Limewire-Being-Sued-For-75-Trillion

  5. Correction by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 5, Interesting

    There is a decline in music downloads that NPD Group is able to track.

    Think about that one for a second.

  6. shitty statistics by fwice · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The number has gone from a high of 16 percent in the fourth quarter of 2007 to just nine percent in the fourth quarter of 2010

    16% of what? the article doesn't mention.

    16% of the population? 16% of what it used to be?

    1. Re:shitty statistics by Captain+Spam · · Score: 5, Funny

      The number has gone from a high of 16% in the fourth quarter of 2007 to just $9,000 in the fourth quarter of 2010. This has been going down at a rate of 34W per day, and it can be expected to be down to 18 acres by the end of 2011. Analysts believe, however, that new P2P technology could see that number jump back up by 12kg before settling at 64 degrees Fahrenheit.

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  7. Was shutting down Limewire the real cause? by Itesh · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or are services like Pandora, Spotify, and even iTunes giving the consumers what they want at a price they want and thus helping to drive pirating down?

    1. Re:Was shutting down Limewire the real cause? by Gabrosin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This. Streaming services make it a lot easier to hear the music you want whenever you want without having to download OR pay for it. I'm partial to Grooveshark myself, but Pandora's pretty good too.

  8. Re:I smell RIAA trolls today... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ugh, both of you ACs, how can you listen to such terrible quality???

  9. All time low? by jolyonr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You mean lower than they were in, say, 1776?

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  10. Thank Amazon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    I don't know about others, but since Amazon started selling unencrypted MP3s, I've stopped turning to illegal sources for music.

  11. Re:In related news... by Kjella · · Score: 5, Funny

    I know, it's soooo time for a dupe. The editors have gotten really sloppy about it, nothing like in the good old days.

    --
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  12. Re:I smell RIAA trolls today... by thehostiles · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'd tell you a joke about audiophiles, but you wouldn't appreciate it as text instead of a 5000 kbps sound file wilth an 8000 dollar stereo.

  13. Re:How about the fact.... by drinkypoo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't really want original music. You want music that sounds like something else you like.

    There is no reason why a mix of two songs that suck can't be fantastic. I don't like to eat cabbage or lactobacillus but I love sauerkraut. "Fusion cuisine" is usually an excuse for some stupid food concept that is being pushed on you but once in a while it results in nirvana, like the potato, pesto, and garlic pizza at Escape from NY. Potato on a pizza sounds stupid until you eat it. (Of course, the stuff is also a poster child for thisiswhyyourefat...)

    Anyway I'm not into Jay-Z and the number of Beatles songs I think are worth a crap can be counted on one hand but DJ Danger Mouse's Grey Album is one of the best things I've ever heard. So basically I think you are being ridiculous.

    --
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  14. Re:How about the fact.... by mlts · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I have to disagree about "modern music" being crap.

    The difference is that in the past, good bands got the spotlight and were heavily promoted.

    These days, what gets the promotion dollars are cookie cutter bands who wouldn't even be able to croak out anything near a melody if it wasn't for Antares's Auto-Tune product. Why do they get promoed? Because it is cheaper to hype some naiive and malleable stars for a few years, then find some new meat when the news stories about their rehab and DUI misadventures hit the press.

    There is still good music being made. However, you won't be finding it on the radio (unless you happen to have an independent station). It will be through services like Pandora, last.fm, and other places, not to mention Web forums and word of mouth that one finds bands that don't suck.

    Trust me; there are a lot of new bands that are worth the ear; they just don't have the huge money behind them that Justin Beiber and Ke$ha do.

  15. Re:How about the fact.... by Hatta · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Right now? Mainstream music has utterly sucked since the late 90s. If you want some quality music over P2P, check out bt.etree.org.

    Personally, my downloading is at an all time low because I have everything I want. I pass up free leech at the private trackers I'm on, simply because I wouldn't have the time to use it anyway.

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  16. Still miss one feature by clickclickdrone · · Score: 4, Informative

    Back in the day pre torrents etc, the best thing for me was searching for a track then being able to browse that person's hard disk for their other shared tracks. I used to find all manner of cool stuff I never knew existed or artists I'd never heard of. I'd *never* have bought them via iTunes or whatever because I simply didn't know they were there. This happened a lot with people from other countries who typically had their local bands mixed in there that you'd never find in your own country. I've lost count of the amount of albums/tracks I've bought because of that ability to dig around. Sure, some sites try and offer 'if you liked this, what about that?' but it rarely produces anything of note and misses out completely on stuff that's way outside your normal listening area. These days, most of my 'discovering' is done via obscure podcasts but it's not very efficient.

    --
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  17. Re:How about the fact.... by dkleinsc · · Score: 4, Insightful

    (If they were musicians, they would create their own original music)

    That's not really true though. For starters, the line between "original" and "unoriginal" music isn't very clear. Which of these groups is creating original music?
    - The Boston Symphony Orchestra playing Beethoven's Ninth Symphony with a fantastic new interpretation
    - A group playing Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on kazoos
    - A disco group who took Beethoven's Ninth Symphony and rewrote it with a dance beat
    - A DJ who took the BSO's recording of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony and made a great dance beat with it
    - An MC who took the DJ's great dance beat and busted some rhymes to it.
    - A folk singer who goes to some obscure area of Hungary, learns a popular folk song from that area, translates the lyrics, and records and popularizes it in the US
    - A second folk singer who adds 10 new verses to that same folk song

    All of them took a musical legacy, added some twists or nuances to it, and made something new. But in the RIAA's worldview, the DJ, MC, and second folk singer did something thoroughly horrible.

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