Welcome to P2PNET.net - The original daily p2p and digital news site. Always First!
Register | Login
RIAA News
Cool Stuff
MPAA News
Games / Consoles
News
Music
Movies
TV
Open Source
Mobiles
Advertising
Product News
P2P
Off Topic
Freedom
Politics
Interviews
Security
DRM
Links
Kids and Kartels
Search: 
Search
 
Web P2PNET   
Search: 
Search
Torrent Site Tracker
TekSavvy
 
Add real-time p2pnet headlines to YOUR site ! Click here to download our newsfeed code

RIAA p2p marketing campaign

p2p news / p2pnet:- The record label cartel’s sue ‘em all marketing campaign isn’t doing its owners, EMI, Universal, Warner and Sony BMG, the slightest bit of good.

In August, 2003, in the US, on average, 2,630,960 people were simultaneously logged onto p2p networks at any given time. Globally, the number was approximately 3,847,565, says p2p research firm Big Champagne.

For the same months in 2004, the numbers were 4,549,801 and 6,822,312 respectively. And for August this year, Big Champagne stats show 6,871,308 people were logged onto the networks at the same time in the US, with 9,620,261 individuals checking in around the world.

In other words, instead of the turning people away, it’s turning them on.

Read on >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>

RIAA Threatens, File-Trading Grows
By Jay LymanTechNewsWorld

Having won a US Supreme Court ruling against peer-to-peer (P2P) operators running unlicensed file-sharing networks, namely the once-popular Grokster, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) has sent cease-and-desist letters to seven more P2P outfits in the US.

However, online music industry experts indicate that despite its court victories, the RIAA is having no negative effect on illegal file-sharing, which has grown more than two and a half times since the recording industry group began filing lawsuits against individual file-traders two years ago.

Yankee Group senior analyst Mike Goodman, said the RIAA’s efforts actually tend to publicize and promote unlicensed file-trading of music online, which jumps by thousands of users every time the issue is in the news.

“You mean the P2P marketing campaign,” he called it in an interview with TechNewsWorld. “Every time they have a press release or there’s news about it, the number of P2P users grows.”

Stop Already
The RIAA has loudly fought the growth and proliferation of P2P networks, from the first suits that brought down the original, unlicensed Napster to individual lawsuits against alleged illegal file-traders. After a court loss late last year on its blanket subpoenas to service providers (ISPs) to give up supposed copyright infringers, the RIAA finally scored a win this year from the Supreme Court, which ruled in June that while P2P technology itself is not illegal, some behaviors by operators encouraging free file-trading was.

With that court ruling in hand, the RIAA most recently sent cease-and-desist letters to seven other P2P operators, warning those businesses that they were in violation of the ruling. The organization did not respond for comment. Some of the recipients reportedly included LimeWire, BearShare and WinMX.

Explosive Growth
Goodman said the RIAA court win has had “zero-effect” on the growth of P2P users, which grew from 3.8 million average users per month when the RIAA suits began in 2003, to 9.5 million in August 2005.

“It just keeps going up,” he said, adding that the RIAA’s court cases have not been the reason for the increase in legitimate online music services, either.

The analyst, who called the growth in P2P “explosive,” observed that the RIAA strategy was like chasing cockroaches that scatter from the light, stressing that for each P2P network targeted, there are ample more to step up and bring on more users.

“It doesn’t go away, it just shifts, and every time it shifts, it gets bigger,” Goodman said.

Managing Jell-O
Gartner Latest News about Gartner research director Mike McGuire told TechNewsWorld a similar story, noting that the focus on Grokster, LimeWire or any other P2P application changes regularly.

“They appear to be moving a lot of traffic off to other protocols,” he said, adding that eDonkey is the latest, most popular P2P.

McGuire, who said the companies promoting better copyright control have good reason to want content protection, indicated that some parts of the music label industry are realizing the need to leverage the technology and architecture of P2Ps, rather than resist them.

However, the majority of the industry continues its legal-PR campaign to pursue P2P operators and users, a tactic for which McGuire also had an analogy.

“It seems to be like trying to manage Jell-O,” he said.

========

Reproduced with permission of TechNewsWorld and ECT News Network. (c) 2005 ECT News Network. All Rights Reserved.

Something you think we should know? tips[at]p2pnet.net

HOME

9 Responses to “RIAA p2p marketing campaign”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    You’ve left an ad in the article “Internet Learn how the leader in Internet services can help you start and grow your business online. Network Solutions. Go Farther.” In the paragraph below “Stop Already”.

    Sorry if thats nitpicky.

    Feel free to delete this post.

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    Not nitpicky at all. Thanks : )

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    i would think that the cartels arent about stopping file sharing as much as they are in controlling it, and making it impossible for average joe nobody musician having a larger success at distributing thier own works without the cartels approval/contol/greasy tenticles buttplugging thier way into every financial orifice.
    I mean if a person’s work could become popular just by it’s quality, instead of platic wrapped PR and BS hype, what kind of horrible, horrible world would this become? Please, won’t anyone think about the tradgedy that would become of all the posers? If no bigname media sponsered personality tells them how to behave what kind of echo will be going thru thier empty heads? This nightmare can be stopped people, so please quit all unendorsed p2p services, and if you know anyone who uses them-wether it’s your mother, children, retired grandparents – please for the sake of maintaining the status que perform a citizen’s arrest and turn them in now, before it’s too late! Point fingers ! Name names! and maybe win some fabulous prizes!
    Only You can stop this scourge of Freedo–I mean file sharing!

  4. Reader's Write Says:

    Note, they are only going after companies that produce these products. This is fine for WinMX/Limewire etc. But what about pure open source products, without developers all over the globe. Prey tell me how they are going to stop that :)

    I know Limewire is open source, but a company is still behind it, and sells the pro version. Emule is pure open source, how can they possiblity stop that. If they try and sue the developers, a new batch of developers will just continue the project. Hell, i’ll even work on the project if they need developers.

    They simply can’t stop us period! To think so is foolish. All they end up doing is proving how pathetic they are, and the lengths they will go to, to protect their pots of gold.

    Money grabbing hores comes up mind when i think of the RIAA/MPAA and counterparts.

  5. Reader's Write Says:

    Besides,
    The current version of WinMX ( for example ) won’t magically
    stop working just ‘cuz RIAA shut down the company. It won’t “vanish” the web either ;)

    Dreddsnik
    Boycott-RIAA.com

  6. Reader's Write Says:

    but when the next version of windows comes out, it won’t work cause M$ won’t allow them to

  7. Reader's Write Says:

    Then people will hopefully switch to BSD or Linux.

  8. Reader's Write Says:

    Not a problem, won’t get it.

    Have to get it ??
    Not a problem .. it will be hacked.

    Nothing they can do that can’t be undone.

  9. Reader's Write Says:

    As a public high school teacher I get through to many of my students through music. I can’t afford to buy songs and I don’t burn copies for anyone. I’m hindered by the narrow choices of what I can hear on the radio since corporate america is calling the playlists on almost all the radio stations in major markets. Much of what airs on the radio is worthless for teaching purposes.
    I use p2p file sharing to find and introduce new artists to students, especially when an artist I’ve never heard of writes something topical. For example, recently we were studying coffee and I searched “Coffee” on Winmx and found some really interesting stuff which my students enjoyed. It’s great to play several songs on a topic to demonstrate how different writers give voice to a single issue or topic.
    If anything, I am introducing new artists to potential buyers-something the record companies aren’t doing. I support creativity and it’s something that can actually benefit the struggling new artists.
    I agree with your respondent who suggested the record companies want to control everything. I deeply resent RIAA restricting access to my lesson plan materials. Where do I go now?
    Sincerely, Angry music loving teacher

Leave a Reply

Please no Spam, flaming (attacking others), trolling, and posting off-topic. Thanks.

    Advertisements
MP3Rocket


Remove Spyware with AntiSpyware for Windows®