Sep 12 2003

Activity on Song-Swapping Networks Steady – “No Mass Exodus” Say Experts

  • Written by
  • No Comments


      Share

Activity on file-sharing networks has not missed a beat this week despite the record industry’s high- profile lawsuits against individual song-swappers, industry trackers and executives said on Thursday.

“There’s no mass exodus, that’s safe to say. Ironically, usage this week and this month is up,” said Eric Garland, a spokesman for BigChampagne, a research firm that tracks peer-to-peer networks that enable file-swapping between different computers.

“We’ve been looking at dramatic increases on the FastTrack Network. The number of people using these file sharing services in the first 10 days of September is up more than 20 percent from the August average,” he said.

FastTrack is the network used by the popular Kazaa and Grokster peer-to-peer networks. The average amount of simultaneous users on more popular services topped 4 million this week, versus 3.3 million in August, he said.

The Recording Industry Association of America filed suit against 261 people on Monday for allegedly pirating songs online and plans to file many more to curb activity on the networks, which it blames for a drop in CD sales.

“On the face of it, this is the opposite of what the RIAA intended,” Garland said.

The RIAA shrugged aside the data. “We don’t put much stock into many of these estimates. Clearly our enforcement efforts have stimulated conversation among parents, children and many others about the illegality of distributing copyrighted music online and its consequences,” said an RIAA spokesman.

“The objective here is to create an environment where legitimate online services can grow and thrive,” he said.

Garland said he expects some people will be scared by potential exposure and increased parental pressure.

“But what we’re hearing from users is they enjoy safety in numbers,” he said, adding, “there’s a perception that suing even a few thousand means the odds of getting sued are like the odds of getting struck by lightning,” he said.

Sue Zeidler

The Story, More Stories

Related

  1. BitTorrent file-swapping networks face crisis
  2. RIAA chief says illegal song-sharing ‘contained’
  3. Comparing Online Music Services to P2P Networks
  4. Cleaning spam from swapping networks
  5. Future of peer-to-peer file sharing networks remains uncertain
Zeropaid on Facebook

Trackbacks url:

Leave a Comment...



  • Advertisement

    Giganews Newsgroups


  • patenthitman: Speaking of patent troll... I'd like to suggest a defense to patent trolls and frivolous patent lawsuits! http://pate...
  • Scary Devil Monastery: Stealthnet is what comes to mind - imagine Kazaa/Gnutella but with AES-256 encryption, immunity versus man-in-the-middle...
  • Pirate Home Page » UK P2P Crackdown Would Only Increase Undetectable Alternatives: [...] Research by UK ISP Talk Talk finds that 80% of 18-34yos surveyed said that if govt tried to make it dangerous to u...
  • UK MPs to Allow Blocked Sites to Appeal: [...] this month I mentioned how Liberal Democrat Lord Clement-Jones had proposed an amendment to the Digital Economy Bi...
  • luke: i GOT Mute, and many more ways to be undetectable, they are somewhat slow but work, and his right, VPN is the best one r...
  • Jared Moya: usenet, VPN, secure http, darknets, etc., etc.......
  • Nate: Good article! I'm using http://www.vpntunnel.se/en/ to surf anonymous it cost only €5 a month for unlimited bandwid...
  • petiii: Can I get an invite to torrentleech please? e-mail: petikee01@gmail.com...
  • sdsd