What Various Studies Really Reveal About File-Sharing
Dangerous_Minds writes "Drew Wilson of ZeroPaid has an interesting look at file-sharing. It all started with a review of a Phoenix study that was used to promote SOPA. Wilson says that the study was long on wild claims and short on fact. While most writers would simply criticize the study and move on, Wilson took it a step further and looked in to what file-sharing studies have really been saying throughout the years. What he found was an impressive 19 of 20 studies not getting any coverage. He launched a large series detailing what these studies have to say on file-sharing. The first study suggests that file-sharing litigation was a failure. The second study said that p2p has no effect on music sales. The third study found that the RIAA suppresses innovation. The fourth study says that the MPAA has simply been trying to preserve its oligopoly. The fifth study says that even when one uses the methodology of one download means one lost sale, the losses amount to less than $2 per album. The studies, so far, are being posted on a daily basis and are certainly worth the read."
to say I wish I was surprised, but I'm not
I know anecdotes don't mean much but...
I was in university (and poor) when Napster became popular and I stopped paying for music. I have money now but the habit kind of stuck and I haven't paid for music since; I know many people who are the same way. I'm pretty sure that P2P has cost the music industry hundreds of dollars from me personally over the last 14 years.
Unfortunately, people don't care about them, regardless of the number of studies you do, the degrees you wave around in their faces and the clearer the data. Our mind actively ignores all information that conflicts with our current worldviews.
A fact lots of well educated people don't seem to understand regardless of the number of studies showing this effect.
Period.
Sugar coat it however you like... rationalize it, justify it, whatever you do... it's still a violation of the rights of the copyright holder.
Pressing millions of copies of a musician's studio-crafted single-- highly exploitative practice that took the hard work of the most compliant musicians they could find. The musicians who manage to game the music industry are just as rare, per capita, as the consumers who actually seek out what they want rather than what they are force-fed by media outlets. This has been true for sixty years.
I have paid musicians for copies of their music that came with personalized notes, or shout-outs that included my name, or logo-printed kazoos, and lots of actual art included. A few artists have come up with products that people might be into e.g. Beck putting a bunch of custom stickers in one of his albums instead of cover art.
Basically I think that the record-funded music industry has been the anomaly, not the corrective factor that the internet introduces into the industry.
Wow, citing research published in the Journal of Evolutionary Economics, the publishing arm of the International Joseph A. Schumpeter Society! Well I guess that proves everything, case closed!
Cherry-picking sympathetic journals while not even addressing the obvious correlation between piracy and decreased music sales is intellectually dishonest.
Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
My first thought was that samzenpus really *LOVES* articles about piracy. Three in a row, samzenpus? Yeash.
Second: yes, piracy does hurt sales. There's decent evidence to show this is the case. One line of support comes from the large declines in music sales over the past ten years and the small declines in the US in movie revenue. A second line of support comes from the fact that I know plenty of people who think you're crazy if you buy music (or any digital media for that matter). For them, it just doesn't make sense to pay for something you can get for free on the internet. Personally, while I have never pirated music, I've been using Spotify for the past year or so and my music purchases have dropped to zero. If Spotify is a good proxy for piracy, then count me as one more person who would've seen my music buying habits drop to zero if I actually thought piracy was moral. Heck, I've got an iTunes gift card on my coffeetable that I've had for over a year, and I haven't used it because it's not even worth the hassle of typing it in - and it wouldn't even cost me any of my own money to actually use it!
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Seems like a lot of wasted space. The bulk of the Slashdot community will never change their opinion and the other side won't change their opinion. The arguments are always the same so why is the subject matter worthy of three posts in a row? Yes they are slightly different but the responses aren't. We might as well run three posts in a row on Evolution verses Creationism. I'm not trying to troll but it seems like the whole thread ends up being redundant and we're into the second decade of the debate. There just has to be other tech stories to cover. There's lots of cool stuff going on in the maker community. Things like the Cube bringing slick professional 3D printing at an afordable price $1,299. http://cubify.com/cube/index.aspx Or a $249 vacuum former kit. http://www.phlatboyz.com/Phlatformer-Kit_p_10.html It just seems there's more happening in the tech world than limiting copyrights and the downloading fight. If some one comes up with a fresh slant on the subject I'm thrilled to hear it but the two sides are so far apart I don't see any compromise in the near future if ever. Just saying to the editors can we keep it to a couple of stories a day and space them out a bit?
Guys, you are assuming that the *AA and the politicians hate filesharing because it damage them economically.
That lands you in the apparent paradox that the same song is both pushed for free delivery via advertising/promotion, and forbidden from free delivery via file sharing.
What is the difference between the two? CONTROL as usual.
File sharing is not a problem because of lost sales in a problematic economy. It is a problem because it puts ALL the music in the same potential position. Both indie and mainstream. Since art has always been used to push ideas, uncontrolled delivery of art is not what any power in charge, no matter the kind, sees with favor.
This also explains why nobody gives a flying f*ck when the new technology makes some professions and products utterly irrelevant, and then get up in arms when the same technology alters the equilibrium on the production of art.
Open up google and put in the following line:
"T. Randolph Beard" "George S. Ford" "Lawrence J. Spiwak"
Doing a quick google search using the names in the article shows something interesting. Articles on telecommunications, wireless, net neutrality threats, and a bunch of other stuff. What also pops up is this strange organization called Phoenix Center.
T. Randolph Beard (Professor of Economics, Auburn University)
George S. Ford (Chief Economist, Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies)
Lawrence J. Spiwak (President, Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal & Economic Public Policy Studies )
Do another google search with the following line:
site:www.phoenix-center.org pdf
This shows a whole bunch of articles behind this strange organization.
Given the creative accounting of the entertainment industry, it's impossible to get meaningful numbers for a research like this. But then again, until they become frank with society, they shouldn't ask for any legislatory help from society either. The right thing to do would be to tell the entertainment industry to come clean with their numbers, otherwise no copyright enforcement law will be based on an informed decision. If they refuse, then just let them die, assuming they really are dying.
As a Member of the European Parliament for the Swedish Pirate Party, I have just published a short book (108 pages) on copyright reform together with Rick Falkvinge, who is the founder of the first and Swedish Pirate party.
The studies mentioned here seem to paint exactly the same picture as a number of studies that we refer to in that book. File sharing is not hurting revenues for the cultural sector. When we look at statistics for the last decade, with rampant file sharing on the internet, we see that more money is going into film, music, books, games and other culture than ever before, and that a larger portion of it is going to the artists and other creative people involved (as opposed to middle men such as the big record companies).
Two weeks ago we had a book launch for "The Case for Copyright Reform" in the European Parliament, and I have distributed a paper copy of it to each of the 754 MEPs (Members of the European Parliament).
Now all that remains to be seen is how many of my colleagues in the parliament will actually read it, but that's another story. ;)
If you are interested in checking out the book, you can download "The Case for Copyright Reform" (for free, obviously) from http://www.copyrightreform.eu/ You can also order a paper copy at cost price via print-on-demand, if you prefer that.
It is time that we start looking at copyright legislation in a fact-based manner, as opposed to the IPR fundamentalist way that has been dominant in this policy area so far on both sides of the Atlantic.
There is a better way.
Christian Engström, Former Member of the European Parliament 2009-2014 for The Pirate Party, Sweden
Thank you for the book.
So, got a schedule for the big world takeover? Really, I haven't seen even the faintest sign of fact-based ANYTHING in this country since 1980. Things are starting to go seriously wrong...
"Malo periculosam, libertatem quam quietam servitutem." -- Jefferson
When I was a kid I used to make mixed tapes off the radio. Doing so has been and continues to be perfectly legal. Making mixed tapes certainly cost a lot of tape/cd sales when i was a kid. I don't particularly believe that recording radio streams over the internet is particularly different in that regard. Don't forget that, wrt demographics, you also just started aging out of the age group that tends to purchase lots of music so that would negatively impact your music purchases as well as napster/technology.
What I see here is that people have discovered "hey, I can download stuff for free" and then just make up all sorts of excuses like "RIAA suppresses innovation" to desperately justify what they are doing.
The question I'm always left asking is this: "Should artists be paid for recordings?"
In days past, performers made money for performing. They still do. There were no recordings on which to profit.
If ALL music were free as in beer and free as in liberty, surely artists would make less money. But would they go bankrupt? Many would still be multi-millionaires from concert ticket sales and merchandise alone. These would be the same artists with or without iTunes and CD sales.
So I ask: Should artists be paid for recordings? I think the answer is "No."
Great warrior...hrmph! Wars not make one great.
Have you even estimated how much music you would have bought had you actually been more-or-less required to buy it?
It's one thing to have built a ridiculously large music library with non-paid downloads, but if you had to pay for it, how much of that library would you actually have paid money for?
I would consider what you *would* have paid for it vs. just some estimate based on how much music you actually have, as what you would have paid for is probably 25% of what you actually have, which more closely tracks or legitimizes what amount to actual lost income for the record industry.
I'd personally love to see a data-driven study of people with large music collections and as to how much they actually listen to their library. My guess is that people with large, non-paid libraries don't listen to much of it, having acquired it because it was easy & free.
Personally I am sick of American culture being crammed down the rest of the world's throats. I hope the American movie and music industry is devoured and never comes back. Movies and music would still exist, they would just not be produced by big studios with multi-million dollar budgets. Whenever I see an American movie, I am disgusted, it is all produced by a marketing machine trying to sell whatever they can to you. The dangerous part is when the try to sell ideas. Anyone else think that is a little weird that whenever an American movie is produced where they even mention the military, the movie has to jump through an incredible amount of hoops in the DOD just to be made?
I may be giving away my age but...
Long before people were downloading movies/music illegally, they were copying it. Granted with antiquated "cassette tapes" and the like, but this is far from something new. Rather it is the latest technological iteration of something old. More interesting is why people pirate... namely economics. When you sell the product for far and above more than the copy media, you should expect some level of piracy. That doesn't make it right, but it makes it understandable. You make someone pay $12-$15 for a CD when the copy media is a fractional of one dollar.
Instead of bribing politicians to create even more draconian legislation, they should seriously consider changing their business model. At $0.99 per song per download, there isn't much incentive for most people to pirate. There may still be people that do it, but I think most people are willing to pay for what they want... just not pay too much...
I was wondering whether someone was going to call the poster out for being an astroturfing sock puppet. While it may, or may not, be the case in this particular example, it shows that people are becoming more aware of the problem. This is a good thing.
I would like to point out that the marketing firms that provide astroturf/sockpuppet service have grown more sophisticated that has our awareness of the problem. For example, a competent sock-puppeteer will create the accounts YEARS in advance and fill them with occasional post so they look like real accounts. They now routinely create entire online ecosystems, including false debates & discussions, where they play multiple the critical roles with different accounts. Watch for this!
I used to be the person record companies love - I'd buy a lot each week, spending over £100 a week wasn't unusual. But when Napster started I was able to here the albums I was interested in before buying them, and only get those I really liked.
Slashdot is one of the "oldest" sites on the net and it still doesn't have a spell-check.
On the plus side, it now comes with all the "like" bullshit. Ah, progress!
Oh, well - I posted A/C, so who cares?
I'll bookmark your comment for later.
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ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
Instead of just buying a CD in a store, it got so that I would have to go home and look it up on the internet to see if the CD was DRM'd. Like many others, I only ever listened to music on my computer, so a DRM'd CD was effective worthless.
The problem was that I would forget to look up the CD when I got home... and the tradition pretty much stuck. Why pay for music when you can get a better product for free. The free wasn't the point, but the ease of access and the better product were.
Running small labels since before Napster has taught me that the freetards of the entitlement generation are no Robin Hoods, they take from the rich as well as the not rich.Every study seems to represent either the big industry or freetards POV and none of them seem to have any sort of rational methodology or business impact calculations.
Here's an interesting and lengthy article on this very subject from David lowery of CVB/Cracker fame. It's well worth a read.
http://thetrichordist.wordpress.com/2012/04/08/meet-the-new-boss-worse-than-the-old-boss-part-1/
just because something has been downloaded doesnt mean its really been used. Its like collectors cards, some people just like to collect stuff. I doubt im the only one who has dled something and never played it.
Has anyone mentioned Louis CK and, now, Jim Gaffigan's successful $5 sales from their own websites? I think we see the future.... The middle man is the middle man as needed, but technology creates efficiencies. Online Travel Agents were good for hotels when distribution was a problem, but now, distribution is not the same problem and they are quickly becoming dinosaurs in lieu of new technology to create a simpler path to booking. Just the same, distributors of music were a necessary middle man, and like so many, retarded the process and made it inefficient. Record labels are dinosaurs. As soon as bands start selling direct, and "fame" is less about marketing dollars vs tried and true, grinding it out for a decade on tour, in a van, and building a real fanbase (instead of buying it).... it will be a warm and wonderful world of art and music, instead of commodification of art, and industry for profit. The labels did it to themselves by not following logic or data. The lies and secrets didn't help. I really hope they are paying attention to this.
I am just this guy, you know?
Flavored w/ the "bitter taste of defeat" & ur foot in ur mouth -> http://yro.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2808773&cid=39855971 ?? LMAO @ U, troll!
How about other forms of IP?
Authors: should university text book writers be paid only for reciting?
Movie producers (the 'artist' here is a more nebulous concept): should they be paid only for cinema screenings? This fits with your musician example on the surface but consider if cinema operators were legally allowed to screen copies.
What this shows is that we (at least you from your post, not everyone) have some notion that artists should be able to potentially profit from their creations somehow. I think the textbook example shows an example where it would be virtually impossible. Similarly, consider a future where perfect holographic recording and broadcasting is possible on your smart phone. This would threaten the viability of live music performances too.
Your argument appears to be that artists should not be able to profit from recording (or control that right) because they can profit from performance. I have to admit I'm conflicted. The question is whether an artist should have the right to control copies of their creation (and if so for how long). You've brought up the interesting notion of why. Do we grant that right to allow profit or for deeper reasons of ownership?