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P2P users buy more music

THIEVES BUY MORE MUSIC: The music biz isn’t going to take this sitting down. A new, Google-supported public opinion survey conducted by Columbia University’s American Assembly suggests that users of unauthorized P2P file-sharing software buy 30% more music than those who don’t. Other findings, as summarized by Ars Technica: Americans overwhelmingly oppose the use of disconnection and rate-limiting as penalties for unauthorized file sharing. Eight in 10 Americans believe that it's OK to share copyrighted content with family members, and six in 10 extend the same logic to friends. But only a small minority of Americans—between 4-15%—say it's reasonable to upload copyrighted content for public consumption, post links to pirated content on Facebook or sell unauthorized copies of copyrighted materials. And a slight majority—53%— believe that search engines should "be required to block links to pirated music and videos online." (1/22a)

HITS LIST BLASTS OFF
Space is the place for Tay. (4/26a)
SONG STREAMS: SWIFT SETS STREAMING RECORD
What did you expect? (4/26a)
SPRING BREAKOUTS: THESE HEATERS ARE STILL HOT
Who's Boomin who. (4/26a)
SONG REVENUE: “SWEET” SMELLS OF SUCCESS
Life after "Church" (4/26a)
STAGECOACH: SETS TO SEE AND PLACES TO BE
Saddle up, cowboys and cowgirls. (4/26a)
THE NEW UMG
Gosh, we hope there are more press releases.
TIKTOK BANNED!
Unless the Senate manages to make this whole thing go away, that is.
THE NEW HUGE COUNTRY ACT
No, not that one.
TRUMP'S CAMPAIGN PLAYLIST
Now 100% unlicensed!
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