
Free songs more attractive to youngsters than paid-for…
By Jo Best
Published: 29 November 2005 12:15 GMT
Illegal downloads are still beating legal online music in Europe, analysts have found.
A report from analyst house JupiterResearch discovered that consumers are three times more likely to get their digital music from illegal file-sharing networks than pay to download the tracks from online song shops such as iTunes and Napster, with 15 per cent of consumers using P2P sites and five per cent using the legitimate online shops.
The taste for illegal music is strongest amongst the young. Of those consumers between 15- and 24-years-old, 34 per cent are illegal file-sharers and, according to the report, have little concept of music as a paid commodity.
Mark Mulligan, analyst at JupiterResearch, told silicon.com that despite the growth in legal sales from services like iTunes, as well as legal actions against uploaders, illegal file-sharing is here to stay.
"The momentum is with the legal services, there's nothing to suggest legal file-sharing is going to go away," he said. "It's a firmly entrenched behaviour and the fact it's free makes it more difficult."
However, the problem is not purely a digital one - young people are happy to get their music illegally whatever format it's available on.
JupiterResearch found that 43 per cent of younger consumers prefer copying CDs to buying them and 40 per cent believe that CDs aren't value for money.
According to Mulligan, the music industry needs to rethink how it deals with young file-sharers. "There needs to be a sea-change in approach," he said. "Instead of [the industry] paying lip service to legal services... there needs to be a whole new layer of free legal services," such as ad-supported downloads, he said.
I want to buy my music online, but will only pay f...
Anonymous
The major record labels should have jumped on a fr...
Anonymous
Of course people are turning to illegal downloads....
D. Applegate
P2P file sharing is here to stay.
the bit torre...
Rob Hoover
I will never spend a dime on any movie, dvd, conce...
dave beall
.NET .NET .NET .NET.NET .NET .NET .NET A leading E-COMMERCE company operating within the music and entertainment industry is currently looking for a ...
Music Industry. An interest in music would also be advantageous. This company is in the music industry and is based in the heart of Londons westend. ...
Music Industry. My client is a web-based service for Broadcasters, Producers and Music Distributors are looking to recruit a web developer. This ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
July 10th: Just MASH Marketing: The Customer Reference Mashup
TechNet Webcast: How Microsoft Does IT: Management and Operations in Windows Server...
Mashing it up with Support: Automate, Coordinate and Collaborate with the Incident...
Ensure Virtualization is Meeting Your Needs--Read this New White Paper
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
silicon.com Dear silicon.com: Tech teacher shortage, Kangaroo and phones on planes Reader Comments of the Week
Mike Barrett From CIO to consultant: Project manager or salesman? Hard lessons from the coalface…