EARLIER this month I wrote a piece on the music industry (Is The Music Industry Dead?)
Today, I heard a soundbite on the radio that last year, 95% of all music downloaded was done so illegally. This was a scarey number!
Then a few more “minor” details were added, which shows the industry and the consumer are finally starting to find a balance.
Legal downloads had increased by a wopping 25% over 2007 figures and legal downloads account for 20% of revenue.
However, the music industry are still pressuring for legislation to disconnect habitual individuals who download music illegally.
On one hand, I can see their point, but as my original post tried to highlight, they need to explore better options than punitive punishment. The pressure it puts on individuals and ISPs plus the policing is just too great a task.
The model they need to move for is “all-you-can-eat” subscriptions. Make it relatively cost effective for the consumer, easy to monitor and so easy people will move away from piracy. If they can get 50% of all downloads to be legitimate, the problem becomes much easier to manage.
I know of several people who will download tracks illegally, see if they like them (takes them days or weeks) then they will buy either the CD or buy the track, and sometimes others once they like the artist etc. These people are good for the industry but technically break the law and would be caught up in the new legislation some countries like France and New Zealand have put in place.
It would be great if they could do something without alienating people. I for one would be happy to pay $20-30 a month and be able to download music as often as I like. It’s a great model for an ailing industry, and I hope they finally realize the old approaches won’t work.
What about you, have you downloaded illegally? What’s your price point that it becomes easier just to download it legally?