Andre Yoskowitz
3 Nov 2007 17:26
University of London researchers Birgitte Andersen and Marion Frenz, have reported in a new survey of a large group of Canadians that the more unauthorized music people download on P2P networks, the more CDs they legally purchase.
The report states “We estimate that the effect of one additional P2P download per month is to increase music purchasing by 0.44 CDs per year.”
Using a simple example, if someone downloads 270 songs via P2P, that person will buy 9 more CDs than someone who only downloaded 27 songs. Those results should be more than surprising to the record industry and anti-piracy groups.
The researchers did not find a positive or a negative relationship between filesharing and CD sales so according to the report, filesharing is not the cause of the drop in CD sales. It may actually even be a boon to it.
Here is just another study telling us what the RIAA doesn't want people to know, that piracy isn't as bad you may think.
Source:
TF