The State of Music Online: Ten Years After Napster
In the decade since Napster’s launch, selling recorded music has become as much of an art as making the music itself.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
In the decade since Napster’s launch, selling recorded music has become as much of an art as making the music itself.
In the midst of dismal data from the recording industry there are still occasional glimmers of silver lining.
Artists and musicians are enthusiastic internet users and they believe the internet helps them make and sell their work.
14% of the 128 million American adults now online report that they downloaded music at one time, but no longer do so. About a third of these former music downloaders – 6 million adults – say that the RIAA’s tactics are the reason they stopped.
The percentage of American adult Internet users who say they download music drops by half and the usage of some file-sharing applications declines.
The number of American adults downloading music continues to grow and two-thirds of those who download or share files say they don’t care whether the files are copyrighted or not.
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