A report published by the European Commission Joint Research Committee
claims that music web piracy does not harm legitimate sales.
The
Institute for Prospective Technological Studies examined the online habits of
16,000 Europeans.
They
also found that freely streamed music provided a small boost to sales figures.
The International Federation of the Phonographic
Industry (IFPI) said the research was "flawed and misleading".
"It seems that the majority of the music that
is consumed illegally by the individuals in our sample would not have been
purchased if illegal downloading websites were not available to them,"
wrote the researchers in their report, Digital Music Consumption on the Internet: Evidence
from Clickstream Data.
"Although
there is trespassing of private property rights (copyrights), there is unlikely
to be much harm done on digital music revenues," they added.
The
team analysed data over the course of one year.
They
also found that music streaming services such as Spotify and Pandora gave a
small boost to music sales.
"According
to our results, a 10% increase in clicks on legal streaming websites lead to up
to a 0.7% increase in clicks on legal digital purchases websites," claimed
the report.
However
the international music industry body the IFPI was highly critical of the research.
"The
findings seem disconnected from commercial reality," it said in astatement.
"If
a large proportion of illegal downloaders do not buy any music (and yet consume,
in some cases, large amounts of it), it cannot be logical that illegal
behaviour stimulates legal download sales and inflicts no harm."
Source:
www.bbc.co.uk
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