Siji wrote:With the fight against illegal downloading of songs starting to pay off
I'm curious about this. If anything I would guess that illegal downloading of music is bigger than ever.
My Giganews account shows I'm on pace to transfer 225GB for the current 30 day time period although I'm just approaching 1TB of downloads after about 1.5 years so that's an unusual amount (think: 360 demos!). With 80 days retention and a good newsgroup index search engine, you can have any song you want, 99% of the time in 5-10 seconds. You may as well think of newgroups as an unlimited mp3 jukebox, make your playlists, and play your music directly from it. There are also plenty of "tab" groups/posts in the newsgroups so budding guitarists will survive.
Illegal downloading isn't going to be stopped until something major happens with the newsgroups. When that happens, pirating will go back to the fun days of seeking out temp .appz/warez folders on random servers that last a few days or hours and then are deleted. Until then, it's an individual moral decision that I get a chuckle out of watching people bicker about. There's always someone that downloads just a little more than you do so you can feel good about yourself and point fingers at "the other guy". I'm presently pointing my finger at some dude, who posted in a forum, that he is averaging 1.2TB/month downloads using giganews. Outrageous! Hanging's too good for'em! Thank god for all of those good christians that don't steal.
Another point that's typically missed is that all "pirating" isn't bad. Most people don't have unlimited budgets that they may use on media type entertainment. (mine is $200-250.00/month divided between music/movies/books/games which might be more than what a lot of non "pirates" spend...if everyone in just the U.S alone spent that much per month on music/movies/books/and games, those four media groups would
each receive ~15 Billion per month. Note: worldwide, the movie industry made ~40 billion in 2001 so I think I'm doing my share) They buy what they can and then leech the rest to fill their entertainment needs for the month or pay period. An analogy would be "cream rises to the top". The consumer that can buy a certain amount each month is going to fine tune their purchases for the next month based on the entire purchased and pirated entertainment they viewed/listened to recently. In this manner, if we believe people overall have good taste, which is debatable, the best entertainment available that may have gone unseen otherwise, will have a better chance of being purchased and not lose out to the crappy stuff with the big advertising budgets.
...wow, what a load of crap!

I sleep like a baby.