Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Music Media

Millions Delete ALL Music Files? 632

Honig the Apothecary writes "CNN is reporting that millions of people have deleted all the music files from their computers in a story here. My question is how the hell would they know? Are they substituting "deleted" for the words "disabled sharing with other users"?"
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Millions Delete ALL Music Files?

Comments Filter:
  • by seanadams.com ( 463190 ) * on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:07PM (#7408672) Homepage
    Hi, this is jim joebob from the NPD group. We're doing a little survey to find out how many households have thrown away their pot. Do you still have a stash over 1oz, or have you disposed of all your contraband since the current crackdown went into effect?

    Either way, please give me your name and address, and the pattywagon will arrive in 15 minutes.
    • by sharkey ( 16670 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:19PM (#7408857)
      the pattywagon will arrive in 15 minutes.

      MMmmmmm... burgers.

    • by I am Kobayashi ( 707740 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:32PM (#7409031)
      Actually it isn't based on a poll, but rather 40,000 voluntary computer users who allow their computers to be monitored...

      Hmm I wonder if people who know their computers are being monitored are more likely to delete their digital music files... Maybe that would affect the validity of this study, you think? :p

      Here is the official press release [npd.com]

      Note it states:
      "Methodology Note: NPD MusicWatch Digital information is collected continuously from the PCs of 40,000 volunteer online panelists, balanced to represent the online population of PC users. NPD's MusicLab survey was fielded in September of 2003 to a representative sample of 5,000 respondents aged 13 and older."
      • by loginx ( 586174 ) <xavier&wuug,org> on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:48PM (#7409202) Homepage
        Call me paranoid but I wonder if those 40,000 'volunteers' are even aware that they have agreed to install monitoring software on their computer and that someone is checking everything they do.

        I wouldn't even be surprised if the monitoring was handled by Gator :P
      • I found this on The RIAA's website [riaa.com], an article I skimmed while looking for their take on these "facts" as reported by CNN. At the bottom of the article, I saw the following (emphasis is mine):

        The Recording Industry Association of America is the trade group that represents the U.S. recording industry. Its mission is to foster a business and legal climate that supports and promotes our members' creative and financial vitality. Its members are the record companies that comprise the most vibrant national
      • by emkman ( 467368 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:30PM (#7409832)
        Kudos to you for actually going to the NPD site and finding out the basis of their claims before bitching on /.
        And to answer your question:
        Hmm I wonder if people who know their computers are being monitored are more likely to delete their digital music files... Maybe that would affect the validity of this study, you think? :p

        Yes; this is called voluntary response bias in statistics. People with large collections of illegal files are much less likely to volunteer to have their PC watched, as you implied. Note from the official press release [npd.com] :Eighty percent of the consumers who deleted files had fewer than 50 files saved; just 10 percent had more than 200 files.
        I think most people will agree that 80% having less than 50 songs is not an accurate representation of the file-sharing population.
      • 40,000 volunteers....yet the press release title says "Millions of households". And then, the survey itself was fielded by only 5,000 respondents.

        I may be a little behind the bell curve here, but how does that add up then to "millions" of households. I can understand maybe millions of files deleted...but I checked and rechecked the release and it plainly states "More than a million households deleted all the digital music files they had saved on their PCs in August".

        Or is NPD MusicWatch Digital just a puppet of the RIAA? Spreading around a little FUD and dis-information...kinda like the inflated enemy body counts of Vietnam.

        • by HardCase ( 14757 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:42PM (#7410010)
          40,000 volunteers....yet the press release title says "Millions of households". And then, the survey itself was fielded by only 5,000 respondents.

          I may be a little behind the bell curve here, but how does that add up then to "millions" of households. I can understand maybe millions of files deleted...but I checked and rechecked the release and it plainly states "More than a million households deleted all the digital music files they had saved on their PCs in August".


          Through the miracle of statistics, it's possible (within a certain margin of error) to extrapolate information on the behavior of a large group of people by analyzing the behavior of a small (but representative) group of people. Thus, if you know how many households are involved in music sharing, you can apply the results of your sample to the population at large and get a very good idea of how that population will behave.


          Or is NPD MusicWatch Digital just a puppet of the RIAA? Spreading around a little FUD and dis-information...kinda like the inflated enemy body counts of Vietnam.


          It's just statistics, not a conspiracy!


          -h-

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:07PM (#7408674)
    that downloaded the new britney cd. Coincidence?
  • by MrCaseyB ( 200218 ) * <casey_slash@luxC ... m minus language> on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:08PM (#7408679) Homepage Journal
    Well Duh! Of course we are deleting all the music files from my computer. How else am I going to have enough disk space for all the pirated HD broadcasts [slashdot.org] I will be downloading?
  • Me too (Score:2, Interesting)

    by NickDngr ( 561211 )
    Yeah, I did too. In fact I deleted everything. Prove I didn't.
    • Re:Me too (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward
      I deleted all the music files from my machine when I reinstalled the OS. Of course, then I loaded them on again from my backup, does that count?
  • How they measure 'file deletions' consumers' PCs... Spyware?!
    • by way2trivial ( 601132 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:14PM (#7408772) Homepage Journal
      See the press release at npd
      http://www.npd.com/press/releases/press_031105.h tm

      it's done via telephone survey apparently

      • Suuuuuurrree now...I can just picture it:

        SurveyGuy: Yes, hello. I'm calling in regards to a survey we are conducting. We would like to know if you have deleted all the illegal music files from your computer since the recent RIAA legal proceedings started?

        HipHopFreak: Uh...YEAH! I deleted them all, because I really want to pay for all the music I listen too. Really...believe me. I don't have any more illegal music files. REALLY! You don't have to send the cops here...

        SurveyGuy: Sir, we're
  • ...wait, no, all 40GB of files are still on there. Of course they're all legally ripped from the CDs I purchased since I was a kid that are all stored in a nice box in my TV room...
  • by r_glen ( 679664 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:09PM (#7408698)
    As far as the RIAA is concered, deleting and 'unsharing' are same thing.
    Their goal is to stop filesharing, not convince users to pay for what they already downloaded.
    • As far as the RIAA is concered, deleting and 'unsharing' are same thing.
      I'm sure they're not AS bothered if you're not sharing them, but if they had a way of finding files on your computer WITHOUT you connecting to a P2P network they'd try and sue you if you had a sufficient amount.
    • by Mattcelt ( 454751 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:17PM (#7408837)
      Believe you me, if there was a feasible way for them to do just that, they would. Remember the legislation they were trying to get passed which would allow them to legally hack into people's computers?

      Don't ever underestimate greed as a motivating factor.
    • Kazaa Lite has a feature that allows you to block listing of your files, but not sharing. So, if someone it trying to download a file, your computer would oblighe them if it has it. However, if someone tries to get a list of what you have, it reports nothing. I guess the reasoning is you can still share, but the RIAA et al can't find a list of all the shit you have to go after you with.
  • Deleted or Burned? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Gr33nNight ( 679837 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:09PM (#7408703)
    Take out deleted and add in burned. With cd writers being under $50, and with blank cds being damn near free, it makes a lot more sence to just burn all your mp3s instead of archiving them on your hard drive.
  • Ya, right. (Score:5, Funny)

    by Mullen ( 14656 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:10PM (#7408707)
    They're just like me, they burn them onto CDROM instead and then delete the files...TO MAKE ROOM FOR MORE PIRATED MUSIC! [Evil laugh...]
  • Correction (Score:5, Interesting)

    by sulli ( 195030 ) * on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:10PM (#7408717) Journal
    RIAA member Time Warner is reporting that millions of people have deleted all the music files from their computers.

    Also on the page (I'm not kidding, look yourself):

    RELATED
    Music swappers sued, amnesty unveiled
    Why I've stopped sharing music
    Study: CDs may soon go the way of vinyl
    12-year-old settles music swap lawsuit
    Why suing college students for music downloading is right
    Details of RIAA's amnesty program: Musicunited.org

    CNN: The Least Trusted Name In News.

    • I actually read the article entitled 'Why suing college students for music downloading is right'

      I wonder if the writer's RIAA masters gave her a nice treat when that article was finished? Here you go, nice reporter, good reporter, would you like a tummy rub?

      Of course, it's not like I actually believed that there was some un-slanted journalism out there, but come on! Surprise me once in a while.
      • Re:Correction (Score:5, Insightful)

        by gregmac ( 629064 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:46PM (#7409182) Homepage
        I actually read the article entitled 'Why suing college students for music downloading is right'

        As did I. How does such bad journalism make it to cnn.com..

        Was it not for copyright's ability to build fences around intangible goods such as lyrics and melodies, a performer like Loretta Lynn would not have been able to leave Butcher Holler, Kentucky, and share her gifts with the world.Was it not for copyright's ability to build fences around intangible goods such as lyrics and melodies, a performer like Loretta Lynn would not have been able to leave Butcher Holler, Kentucky, and share her gifts with the world.

        So without copyright, they never would have made it. Oh, ok. I guess I'll just take your word for it, since you didn't provide any reasoning or proof behind that statement - which the rest of the article is based on, I might add.

    • Re:Correction (Score:5, Informative)

      by Datasage ( 214357 ) <Datasage AT theworldisgrey DOT com> on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:20PM (#7408858) Homepage Journal
      Yup, cnn is own by time warner. They also own all of these music labels.

      Warner Music Group - Recording Labels
      The Atlantic Group
      Atlantic Classics
      Atlantic Jazz
      Atlantic Nashville
      Atlantic Theater
      Big Beat
      Blackground
      Breaking
      Igloo
      Lava
      Mesa/Blu emoon
      Modern
      1 43
      Rhino Records
      Elektra Entertainment Group
      Elektra
      EastWest
      Asylum
      Elektra/Sire
      Wa rner Brothers Records
      Warner Brothers
      Warner Nashville
      Warner Alliance
      Warner Resound
      Warner Sunset
      Reprise
      Reprise Nashville
      American Recordings
      Giant
      Maverick
      Revolution
      Qwest
      Wa rner Music International
      WEA Telegram
      East West ZTT
      Coalition
      CGD East West
      China
      Continential
      DRO East West
      Erato
      Fazer
      Finlandia
      Magneoton
      MCM
      Non esuch
      Teldec
      Other Recording Interests
      Warner/Chappell Music (publishing company)
      WEA Inc. (sales, distribution and manufacturing)
      Ivy Hill Corporation (printing and packaging)
      Warner Special Products

      Source: http://www.cjr.org/tools/owners/timewarner.asp [cjr.org]
    • Re:Correction (Score:5, Insightful)

      by BJZQ8 ( 644168 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:24PM (#7408911) Homepage Journal
      I love these lines from another CNN Story... "In a culture without copyright, only the rich, or the government-sponsored, could be this culture's full-time creators. Poor artists such as Loretta Lynn would have to flip burgers long into their music careers -- and might even give up on music entirely." So, instead, in a culture WITH copyright, only the rich and government-sponsored (through government-protected monopolies) are this culture's full-time creators. Poor artists flip burgers even though they have multi-platinum selling albums, while the music companies get billions.
      • Re:Correction (Score:4, Insightful)

        by (trb001) ( 224998 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:11PM (#7409580) Homepage
        The funny part is, Loretta Lynn didn't get bubkus because of copyright, she got where she was because she worked her tail off performing live and distributing her music to every radio station around, usually by hand. People weren't trying to copy her music...in fact, while she was 'rising to the top' she would have been only too happy to have someone play her music and make it more famous.

        --trb
    • by sharkey ( 16670 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:29PM (#7408976)
      CNN: The Least Trusted Name In News.

      Ahem [foxnews.com]

      • Re:Correction (Score:4, Informative)

        by BrynM ( 217883 ) * on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:04PM (#7409488) Homepage Journal
        Seems there aren't many to trust in news. In the spirit of the poster above [slashdot.org], these are the assets of News Corporation, Fox's parent company from the Columbia Journalism Review [cjr.org]:

        Television
        Fox Broadcasting Company Fox Television Stations
        WNYW - New York City , WWOR - New York City , KTTV - Los Angeles , KCOP - Los Angeles , WFLD - Chicago , WPWR - Chicago , KMSP - Minneapolis , WFTC - Minneapolis , WTXF - Philadelphia , WFXT - Boston , WTTG - Washington D.C. , KDFW - Dallas , KDFI - Dallas , WJBK - Detroit , KUTP - Phoenix , KSAZ - Phoenix , WUTB - Baltimore , WRBW - Orlando , WOFL - Orlando , WOGX - Ocala , WAGA - Atlanta , KRIV - Houston , KTXH - Houston , WJW - Cleveland , WTVT - Tampa , KDVR - Denver , KTVI - St. Louis , WITI - Milwaukee , WDAF - Kansas City , KSTU - Salt Lake City , WHBQ - Memphis , WGHP - Greensboro , WBRC - Birmingham , KTBC - Austin
        BSkyBFOXTEL , SKYPerfecTV , STAR , Stream , Fox News Channel , Fox Movie Channel , FX , National Geographic Channel , SPEED Channel , Fox Sports Net , Fox Sports South , Fox Sports Pittsburgh , Fox Sports Southeast , Fox Sports Midwest , Fox Sports Rocky Mountain , Fox Sports Arizona , Fox Sports Northwest , Fox Sports West , Fox Sports West#2 , Fox Sports Detroit , Fox Sports Bay Area (with Rainbow Media Holdings) , Fox Sports Chicago (with Rainbow Media Holdings) , Fox Sports New England (with Rainbow Media) , Fox Sports New York (with Rainbow Media) , Fox Sports Ohio (with Rainbow Media) , Fox Sports Intermountain West , Fox Sports Southwest , Sunshine Network , Madison Square Garden Network
        Film
        20th Century Fox , Fox Searchlight Pictures , Fox Television Studios
        Newspapers
        United StatesNew York Post
        United KingdomNews International , News of the World , The Sun , The Sunday Times , The Times
        AustraliaDaily Telegraph , Fiji Times , Gold Coast Bulletin , Herald Sun , Newsphotos , Newspix , Newstext , NT News , Post-Courier , Sunday Herald Sun , Sunday Mail , Sunday Tasmanian , Sunday Territorian , Sunday Times , The Advertiser , The Australian , The Courier-Mail , The Mercury , The Sunday Telegraph , Weekly Times
        Magazines
        InsideOut , donna hay , SmartSource , The Weekly Standard , TV Guide (partial)
        Books
        HarperCollins PublishersHarperCollins General Book Group , HarperCollins , Perennial , Cliff Street Books , The Ecco Press , Quill , HarperAudio , Regan Books , Amistad Press , Zondervan , Morrow/Avon , William Morrow , Avon , HarperTorch , Eos , HarperEntertainment , HarperSanFrancisco , HarperInformation , HarperBusiness , HarperResource , Access Travel , William Morrow Cookbooks , Branded Books Program
        HarperCollins Children's Book GroupGreenwillow Books , Joanna Cotler Books , Laura Geringer Books , HarperCollins HarperFestival , HarperTrophy , Tempest
        Other
        Los Angeles Dodgers , New York Rangers & New York Knicks (20% - Through partnership with Cablevision) , Los Angeles Kings (NHL, 40% option) , Los Angeles Lakers (NBA, 9.8% option) , Staples Center (40% owned by Fox/Liberty) , News America New Media , Fox Sports Radio Network , Broadsystem , Festival Records , Fox Interactive , Mushroom Records , National Rugby League , NDS , News Interactive , News Outdoor , Nursery World
        last updated 7/21/03

    • Re:Correction (Score:4, Insightful)

      by dabadab ( 126782 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:30PM (#7408993)
      I think the worst of them all is:
      Why suing college students for music downloading is right

      It is, because it explicitly says the downloading is illegal. It is NOT. In fact, no one has been sued because of downloading.
      Downloading is legal.
      RIAA sues people because of uploading (i.e. distibution - because that is what copyright regulates).
      I think they are spreading misinformation purposefully (as this article is coming from a law expert) and I guess we should counter this FUD as much as possible.

    • Re:Correction (Score:5, Informative)

      by Epistax ( 544591 ) <epistax@g[ ]l.com ['mai' in gap]> on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:30PM (#7408996) Journal
      The article is from reuters, not CNN, you silly, silly bastard.

      LOS ANGELES, California (Reuters) -- More than a million households deleted all the digital music files they had saved on their PCs in August, a sign that the record industry's anti-piracy tactics are hitting home, research company NPD Group said. ...
  • by Coyote67 ( 220141 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:11PM (#7408720) Homepage
    Thats right horribly evil RIAA lawyers, I deleted my mp3s, so please don't sue me. Its not like I just moved them out of the shared folder or anything. Wait....oh crap.
  • by SubtleNuance ( 184325 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:11PM (#7408724) Journal
    Its sad that modern american corporate media can be such obvious tools.

    How can they publish such obvious self-serving corporate propaganda? Did CNN, or the author ever stop to think "hey, maybe they're assumptions are rigged in order for them to recieve some personal gain?" You'd think that they'd question the source of the information they'd base such a story on.

  • I have deleted all music files on my computer. Therefore, I should not be sued by the RIAA. Not that my answers to you would directly effect their decision as to whether to sue me or not, because you are an independent research company, not corporate flunkies who'd narc me out the second I get off the phone.
  • by l810c ( 551591 ) * on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:11PM (#7408735)
    Has anyone on Slashdot ever participated in a survey that asked if you had deleted mp3's?

    I took a couple of marketing classes and I understand the principals involed in calculating marketing data, but where are they getting their data?

    In May, 606,000 households deleted ALL mp3's. 1,400,000 in August. Let's just say that 1mil/month for 4 months. 4,000,000 HOUSEHOLDS(not people) in 4 months. At that rate mp3's will be wiped from existence sometime next year. It just doesn't add up.

  • whoops! (Score:2, Funny)

    by wo1verin3 ( 473094 )
    >> Millions Delete ALL Music Files?

    I delete my thousand music files once a month when I reinstall Windows because the damn OS is so unstable. Over the past year I've deleted 12000 music files, the same ones twelve times.
  • Methodology (Score:5, Informative)

    by Snot Locker ( 252477 ) * on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:12PM (#7408743)
    The original press release is here [npd.com]. In it, it states:

    Methodology Note: NPD MusicWatch Digital information is collected continuously from the PCs of 40,000 volunteer online panelists, balanced to represent the online population of PC users. NPD's MusicLab survey was fielded in September of 2003 to a representative sample of 5,000 respondents aged 13 and older.

    Still, you have to believe their volunteer panelists wouldn't fess up to having any downloaded music given the current RIAA intimidation tactics.

    • Re:Methodology (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:31PM (#7409015)
      This note completely explains the situation. These people volunteered to be monitored. They had big MP3 collections and thought "Eh, maybe legal, maybe not, but who cares, nothing will come of it." Then they hear about lawsuits.

      Now, since they *volunteered* to be monitored, of course they want to delete all their MP3's. It's kind of like saying "100% of drug dealers who volunteered to have their houses searched with several hours notice have been found to have NO DRUGS!"

      Yeah, sure, of course. But that number isn't going to be representitive of all drug dealers.
    • by freeweed ( 309734 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:37PM (#7409100)
      Yeah, this reminds me of "surveys" we would take in high school.

      Half the kids (the 'good' ones) would never admit to having done drugs, or had sex, even if they had. They were worried that the school would tell their parents somehow, that it wasn't truly anonymous.

      The other half of us.. well let's just say that at 14 I was having sex at least twice a day, drinking probably 40 ounces of alcohol a night, and had done crack twice in the past week alone. Oh, and I was also a gay transvestite horse-buggerer (for the surveys that had write-on options).
  • Since when? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) * on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:12PM (#7408752) Homepage
    Since when has been ok to post stories and articles without backing it up with proof?

    Now, were this a link to The Weekly World News, that'd be different. ( I love that rag )
    • Re:Since when? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by pmz ( 462998 )
      Since when has been ok to post stories and articles without backing it up with proof?

      I'm pretty sure they teach this as a fundamental strategy in the journalist training camps.
  • by the_skywise ( 189793 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:13PM (#7408753)
    We asked 2 people if they had deleted all their files. 1 said yes, the other said no. We factored that in against the population of the US, # of computer users, # of estimated song downloaders, and then against a .5% factor of error...

    Voila 1.4 million people have deleted their music drives. That'll be 5 cents please.
  • Hmmm (Score:3, Insightful)

    by boschmorden ( 610937 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:13PM (#7408755)
    If you go to NPD Group's website and click on their press release, they had this to say: "Methodology Note: NPD MusicWatch Digital information is collected continuously from the PCs of 40,000 volunteer online panelists, balanced to represent the online population of PC users. NPD's MusicLab survey was fielded in September of 2003 to a representative sample of 5,000 respondents aged 13 and older." How were those volunteer panelists chosen? Perhaps they were provided by their client the RIAA from people who signed their on-line forgiveness document. It's hard to believe any of this information when their clients spend a lot of money to get the answer they want. I could probably produce a study showing that music-swapping is up 400% by monkeys in Nepal.
    • Re:Hmmm (Score:2, Insightful)

      by OzPhIsH ( 560038 )
      information is collected continuously from the PCs of 40,000 volunteer online panelists

      Ok, so all this really says, is that there are 40,000 people who know that information is collected continuously from the PCs, and of these people, millions of mp3s were deleted. This means NOTHING. Come on now, if you volunteered to have your system monitored 24/7 wouldn't you delete all those files too? People are pretty wise now to the actions of the RIAA and the whole legality issue surrounding mp3s. I wouldn't tr
  • I just deleted Windows so I would have more space for stuff like that!
  • by FrEaK7782 ( 588564 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:14PM (#7408781)
    Ya, they deleted it all... [penny-arcade.com]
  • That is probably true if you count all of the users who accidentally delete a critical file or Windows being so screwed up a re-install is the only option. Not to mention the occasional HD crash or scratched CD.
  • There is no way they could know that.... but the RIAA probably loves them saying it... "Look ma, we're winning!"
    Some probably have deleted everything our of fear... but those are the users who simply don't know the difference between a bark and a bite from the paper tiger.
    I haven't deleted a single music file, and I doubt most have...

    This is just another PR story for the RIAA.

  • (conspiracy theory cap on)
    Well, I think its obvious how CNN knew this. The RIAA probably uploaded one of those viruses to Kazaa that delete all your music files. They also have a team who keeps track of every machine it affects, along with the persons name, street address, and credit card info (for automatic billing of the $90B fine). CNN simply said they wanted to do an article about how the RIAA was winning their battle against the EVIL pirates. So they supplied them with the info showing how many peo
  • So basically all this is saying that they've needlessly scared enough people to delete anything with a .mp3 extension on their computers whether they ripped them from owned cd's or not.

    There's a reason I haven't bought a cd in almost 3 years.
  • Because my hard drive only holds so much! You go through a cycle of fill the drive, burn them all off to a bunch of CD-Rs, wipe it, rinse, repeat :)

    Seriously though, the genie is out of the bottle. They can quote all the surverys and statistics they want. If you tell me though that this month Kazaa usage was down 10% I'll assume eDonkey's went up by at least that.

    These people aren't stopping, they're just moving on to the next safe haven the same way they all moved from napster (cough sellouts cough) to k
  • owned by Time Warner who also puts out a lot of music. Here's the RIAA members list [chaozation.com] BTW. Warner Brothers is a member.
  • by Conspiracy_Of_Doves ( 236787 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:17PM (#7408830)
    AFTER I burned them to CD
  • by jlechem ( 613317 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:18PM (#7408844) Homepage Journal

    My PC went beep beep beep and suddenly all my mp3's were gone!

    *ducks*

    Threadkilling since 1992

  • From the article:

    NPD also found that the number of households acquiring digital music via peer-to-peer file-sharing services declined by 11 percent from August to September, during the traditional summer holiday for college students.

    What exactly would attribute this to a success of the RIAA's anti-piracy tactics rather than the fact that students are leaving their T3 connected dorms and returning to their parents dial-up?

    To be fair, the article didn't state any connection of these numbers to the RI

  • Uh oh (Score:3, Funny)

    by Trolling4Dollars ( 627073 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:21PM (#7408876) Journal
    Are they substituting "deleted" for the words "disabled sharing with other users"?"

    GEEZ!!!! Will you shut up!? We're counting on the fact that the RIAA doesn't know the difference. ;P

  • I don't know about millions, but I've talked to a couple of people who have deleted all their music before I explained to them sharing.

    You have to understand 95% of people using Kazaa and such have Zero idea what happens. All they know is that they can get free music and now people are getting sued.
  • Anyone else reminded of the communist "Cultural Revolution" in China?
  • ...wouldn't this mean that RIAA member companies should see their CD sales soar again. Afterall, every time you download an illegal MP3, you're taking away the money you would have spent on CDs from RIAA. With all those MP3s gone, people will have no choice but to go out and buy all those songs.
  • Dear NPD,

    I would just like to inform you that I have not deleted any of my several thousand music files. I have simply deleted Kazaa and moved over to *CENSORED*. Please adjust your count accordingly.
  • good grief. (Score:3, Informative)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:26PM (#7408927) Homepage
    Nothing like reading a RIAA paid INFO-tisement.

    and I really love how they still paint ANY music file as illigitimate and EVIL.

    I'm educating my daughter and her friends, they spend at least 2 days a week surfing on www.iuma.org for new indie bands to download and they have cince stopped listening to RIAA music on the radio. My daughter has asked if I could buy her a few of the CD of artists she likes, they ALL are unsigned bands from IUMA.

    when you discover that there is an alternative source that only takes a bit of effort to get better quality music.... I can see why the RIAA is extremely afraid of music files.
  • Remember (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Metaldsa ( 162825 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:35PM (#7409066)
    The RIAA represents big record labels such as Bertelsmann's BMG Entertainment, Vivendi's Universal Music and Time Warner's Warner Music. Time-Warner is the parent company of CNN.com.

    So one of the companies underneath the RIAA is reporting something they find favorable. Its not surprising. I'm sure if some 10 person company came out with a survey that people loved the RIAA's new tactics they would publish that too.

    Journalistic integrity is not always held to a high standard. This comes up when they can pass the credibility to another company. This time its the "research company NPD Group" or whoever the fuck they are.
  • by bushboy ( 112290 ) <lttc@lefthandedmonkeys.org> on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:39PM (#7409115) Homepage
    I need space for my divx screener collection dammit !
  • by gorfie ( 700458 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:45PM (#7409177)
    I personally deleted all of my mp3's as well as all traces of said mp3's in the registry because I didn't want to chance being harassed. However, I also have not purchased a CD since then nor will I ever purchase one in the future.

    The music industry stifles musical creativity by picking up the latest britney clones and telling the masses that they are popular. Even the artists that are lucky enough to be chosen don't make anything from the CD sales. It's all about some old man somewhere making 90% profit from each CD sold, just because a group of those guys controls what gets sold to stores, what plays on the radio, and what is seen on MTV.

    I can safely say that I've given up on the music industry and the only time I am exposed is when I'm in the car and the radio happens to be on. Good riddance Recording Industry Ass. of America. You can take your pop music and shove it up your ass.
  • My bad (Score:5, Funny)

    by Cyno ( 85911 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:47PM (#7409197) Journal
    I'm sorry about all the confusion. I deleted millions of songs off my computer. I work for Time Warner, so I guess some of my coworkers might have noticed. Sorry about that.
  • by DwarfGoanna ( 447841 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:48PM (#7409201)
    In other news:

    Um...millions of hot cheerleaders have had sex with ME! They obviously had a good reason, and you would hate to upset the status quo, right? In fact, many cheerleaders that have refused to have sex with me have been sued by large faceless corporate conglomerates.



    (whoo-hoo!)

  • RIAA (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bs_02_06_02 ( 670476 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:54PM (#7409322)
    The RIAA is a political organization, looking to ban technology to save their business model.
    The recording industry fatcats want their money, and are scared of new technology. No one wants to split from the group and try selling music in any other fashion than the current model. They feel threatened. The industry is behaving exactly like they did during the cassette tape scare, just like the motion picture industry was scared of the VCR and video tape. Remember movie rentals? VHS videos were frequently $100 or more until used movies became available... and movie houses started dropping their retail prices down to the current prices.
    Movie rentals threatened the movie industry, until they realized that it actually developed new markets for their material.

    The RIAA is not filled with innovative, bright individuals. The RIAA throws money at weak-minded, spineless senators and congresspeople like Conyer, Fritz Hollings, and any politician from California (Berman, Feinstein, etc.). The recording industry sees technology as the end of their business. They are in denial. The emperor has no clothes.
    What's really funny is that they also profit from the downloaders. They research what the downloaders' are trading, and call the radio stations to increase air time, which sells more CDs. Hypocrites! They profit from the very process they're trying to stop.
    I don't fault them for researching the downloaders' behavior. That's the bright people helping the record biz survive.
    The political side of the biz is what I can't stand. This is why most people can't stand politicians or the courts.

    Politicians choose not to understand the technology, they choose to listen to those with the biggest pocketbooks. Ostriches... with their heads in sand.
    With the RIAA and Fritz Hollings' old method of thinking, the school systems should only be using chalkboards and chalk. The police will be stopping by later to pick up your VCR, computer, and cassette tape recorder.
    "No new technology, it ruins our business."
  • by TerminalInsanity ( 720167 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:55PM (#7409325) Homepage
    The RIAA represents big record labels such as Bertelsmann's BMG Entertainment, Vivendi's Universal Music and Time Warner's Warner Music. Time-Warner is the parent company of CNN.com.
    I wonder how much influence RIAA has on CNN... With other storys titled " Why suing college students for illegal music downloading is right [cnn.com] " and " Why I've stopped sharing music [cnn.com] ", im guessing alot.

    If im counted in the 'millions' statistic, they are wrong... i, and many people i know have stopped publicly sharing, and started sharing to people we download from and know :)

  • by SplendidIsolatn ( 468434 ) <splendidisolatn@nOSPAm.yahoo.com> on Thursday November 06, 2003 @02:58PM (#7409395)
    I know of more than a few non-technical people who still were able to figure out Napster/Kazaa/etc and download songs who deleted EVERY .mp3 the second they heard about RIAA lawsuits/etc. They didn't understand that the RIAA was going after sharers--they heard 'mp3' and 'lawsuit' in the same sentence and freaked out. Granted, this is just anecdotal and not representative of the whole population, but I think it's an attitude more than just a few people had.

    I have a feeling a good number of other people did the same thing, even if they did just rip the music from their purchased CDs. To the uninformed, it must look really scary.
  • by fygment ( 444210 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:00PM (#7409418)
    To quote the original release:

    The music industry's success in reducing file-sharing activity has been impressive, but now the real work of winning back the hearts and minds of consumers must begin," Crupnick said. "To capitalize on this success, the industry must re-double efforts to educate the file-sharing public about how illegal file sharing affects not just the industry's bottom line, but also the artists themselves and the ability of the industry to continue to offer a wide range of new music to consumers. New legal ways to purchase digital music on the Web can work hand-in-glove with these education efforts and help to improve the public's perception of the music industry."

    Not a single mention about winning our hearts and minds with better content, fairer prices, or better treatment of artists. No. They want to reemphasize how BAD the public has been. Yes, the floggings will continue until morale improves!

    The RIAA so profoundly does not get it ...

  • by julez ( 94422 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:03PM (#7409468) Homepage
    I have 15GB to fill on my iPod and that frees up a heck of a lotta room on my hard drive for more games!
  • by azaris ( 699901 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:04PM (#7409492) Journal

    If 1.4 million deleted all their MP3s and we assume the average P2Pirate had 100 illegal MP3s with the well-known value of $2,500 per track, this means RIAA member companies just made a net profit of:

    1.4 * 10^6 * 100 * 2500 = 350 billion USD

  • WHAT THE FUCK (Score:4, Insightful)

    by greymond ( 539980 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:05PM (#7409500) Homepage Journal
    I think CNN's interpretation of "Deleted" is actually just wishful thing. Although I bet a lot of kids have been yelled at by Mom and Dad and probably grounded from "web use" for having kazaa installed.

    On a side note (sorta related) I saw the Matrix Revo- last night and before the movie was this ad about software piracy and why it's wrong because lot's of people work hard to make good movies. This was laughed at, booed, and general flaming comments shouted by the audiance at the ad.
  • RTFA (Score:3, Interesting)

    by phreak03 ( 621876 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:10PM (#7409569) Homepage Journal
    I read this is the wall street journal the other day.
    A company has got 10,000 people to install monitoring softward on their computers, and they use that to gague internet behavior.

    How many pirates would volenteer to have monitoring software on their computer?
    Heck it was probebly a spyware tool used to check for this... Most of the people only had a few
    songs that stoped shareing, hardly cutting down on the masses
  • Price of Policy (Score:3, Interesting)

    by _Sprocket_ ( 42527 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:24PM (#7409760)
    Everything has a price. In this case, what is being described as a successful strategy also has a price: public perception. CNN's bit touches on this:

    A related NPD survey of consumer perception, however, found that consumers' overall opinion of the recording industry is suffering due to the RIAA's move to sue hundreds of people alleged to have illegally shared music online.

    Which makes sense. But it misses some subtle and interesting points highlighted by NPD's press release [npd.com]:

    A MusicLab survey fielded by NPD in September noted that consumers' overall impressions of the recording industry were negatively affected by threats of litigation. Two-thirds of consumers who had recently shared files on P2P networks reported that the lawsuits caused them to have a "much more" or "somewhat more" negative opinion of record companies in general. Just over 40 percent of consumers who had not downloaded music in the previous four weeks felt similarly.

    It should not be a shock to anyone that file traders might find the RIAA's actions distastefull. After all - they're the ones either directly affected or threatned by it. But what's interesting is that it appears that the same negative reaction is being expressed by those who are either casual traders or not involved in file trading at all.

    This aludes to the often-expressed opinion that it is dangerous to sue one's customer base. It will be interesting to see if the Industry is able to manage this increasingly negative opinion and, if not, if it will affect the bottom line.
  • by Captain McCrank ( 583414 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @03:27PM (#7409798)
    These news services have people who are on staff that are paid to create content. My Aunt is actually a writer for the AP and I learned something very interesting a few months back that has totally improved my perspective on articles like this.

    Editors ask writers to create content on subjects that they think will be picked up by other news services. The union rules state that the writer retains the right to withold their name on a story if they feel the story is inaccurate or if they disagree with what they've been asked to write. Editors hate when writers do this because those in the industry know what a authorless article implies. This is why you will sometimes see stories from the AP or Reuters that do reference the author:

    Move Over Beauty Queens, Italy Seeks Miss Digital [yahoo.com]

    And others that don't:

    Dog Shoots Man [yahoo.com]

    So what does this mean to you, the critical consumer of news? If an article carries the author's name, it means they endorse it's content - they believe in the validity of it. If it does not, it means the writer was either forced to create content that they didn't agree with or believe was accurate or that the writer was up against a deadline and failed to provide content that they were proud of.

    The cnn article, interestingly, does not provide an author. Any thoughts on why? The question of how they know content was deleted is awfully vital to getting the point of this article across. It really doesn't seem to stand up to scrutiny.

  • by blankmange ( 571591 ) on Thursday November 06, 2003 @05:41PM (#7411454)
    I deleted all the illegal things off of my PC and then all I saw was

    /C:

    what the hell is that????

Love may laugh at locksmiths, but he has a profound respect for money bags. -- Sidney Paternoster, "The Folly of the Wise"

Working...