File Sharing and CD Sales, Again 319
Andrew Leonard writes "Stan Liebowitz, an economist studying the effects of file-trading on the music industry, says in an article in Salon that new numbers have convinced him that the decline in CD sales may be partially attributable to MP3 downloading. But he also argues that the decline does not justify draconian new laws."
Obviously there is some mistake (Score:1, Interesting)
This Stan Liebowitz person is probably some guy trying to make a name for himself by stirring up trouble on Slashdot. Let's not give him the satisfaction!
Obviously, it does affect CD sales to SOME extent! (Score:5, Insightful)
You're always going to have the normal guy who doesn't care about "branded" CDs or the slight (and sometimes perceptible) quality loss of MP3s over CDs...he goes ahead and burns his MP3s to a 5-cent CDR and listens to it anyway.
You're always going to have the fellow who likes to support artists, and buys original CDs. Catch? He now listens to MP3s to sample new albums. He doesn't like the sample...he doesn't buy the CD. Whereas earlier he would be stuck with the CD as a sample (no CD returns!), he is now a "loss" to the music company.
Re:Obviously, it does affect CD sales to SOME exte (Score:3, Interesting)
> to support artists, and buys original CDs. Catch?
> He now listens to MP3s to sample new albums. He
> doesn't like the sample...he doesn't buy the CD.
This would certainly be me, as are many others.. yes, it decreases sales... but none less then the radio has. The difference is that with the internet, the quality is a little better and you can avoid commercials.
There is also a 4rd group, like my sisters.. they buy the CDs, but download the mp3s because they aren't knowledgable enough to rip & encode their own.
The only sad thing is that there are some who abuse the power and never buy the cds.
Re:Obviously, it does affect CD sales to SOME exte (Score:2)
And people who don't have any radio access to hear new music with (believe it or not, there are large chunks of non-metro California with virtually zero radio reception -- I know, I live in one of 'em) and otherwise would never hear ANY new music, so would otherwise never buy any either.
But I suspect the majority actually do what I do: I get exposed to some "new" (at least to me) artist via MP3, I like the first song, so I download a few more and like them too, then I run out and buy the album as a hardcopy backup (of better quality) for the ephemeral MP3s that might go *poof* if my hard disk goes tits-up between backups.
I can tell you positively, that there have been TWO periods when I've *bought* lots of music: when I was DJing and had access to one of the largest music libraries in the world (complete with a tape unit so I could copy whatever I wished), and when I had faster online access and it was reasonable to download lots of MP3s. Since I moved, my connect speed went to hell due to shit phone lines (right now I'm connected at 16.8k!!) and it's no longer practical to download anything; after a while I noticed that I was no longer buying music either (probably because there's nothing new in my MP3 collexion to entice me to lust after my own real copy of).
Coincidence? You decide.
Re:Obviously, it does affect CD sales to SOME exte (Score:3, Interesting)
There's also the guy who uses MP3s to sample new albums but wasn't falling for the "CD as a sample" trap before - he just wouldn't buy a new album if he didn't know it - he'd wait until perhaps he got a chance to hear it as a friend's place, or just do without. This guy actually buy more CDs since MP3s have come along.
Are there enough of these guys to balance the others? I don't know, but there are definitely enough that they shouldn't be ignored as a part of the market.
Russ
Your missing a point... (Score:2, Interesting)
Since mp3s hit the scenes, my CD purchases have gone *up*. This is not a unique situation: most of my friends are in the same boat, as well as several studies I have seen on this effect.
When we think about how this may or may not affect the music industry negatively, don't forget the positive effects as well as the negative.
Re:Your missing a point... (Score:2, Informative)
The quality of most of the MP3s on the file sharing networks is not adequate for anyone that really cares about the music. I look at them as samplers, nothing more.
All those MP3s being swapped may well be violations of copyright, but I'd be surprised if even 10% of them represented lost sales. Most of the people downloading these files weren't going to buy the CD anyway. And there are at least some people who are buying more as a result of the file swapping.
Re:Obviously, it does affect CD sales to SOME exte (Score:2)
You're always going to have the normal guy who doesn't care about "branded" CDs or the slight (and sometimes perceptible) quality loss of MP3s over CDs...he goes ahead and burns his MP3s to a 5-cent CDR and listens to it anyway.
Then again, isn't it questionable whether or not the people in these two examples would've bought the CDs anyway? Before MP3s, I just didn't listen to music (outside of the radio and such), and therefore didn't buy CDs. Now, I listen to a lot of songs that are released openly by the artists as MP3s and occasionally save RIAA songs... and therefore don't buy CDs. So in the case of people like me and the cheap or morally opposed people in the examples you listed, MP3s have changed how much music we listen to, but has kept the amount of music that we buy firmly at $0 per year.
In the end, I think it mostly balances out. Some of the people that used to buy CDs no longer buy CDs because of MP3s, some of the people that didn't used to buy CDs now buy CDs because they were introduced to the artists through MP3s, and some people never bought any CDs and still don't, regardless of MP3s.
The real problem with this debate, though, is that you can't really tell what's going on. There's no REAL way to tell how many people started buying CDs because of MP3s, how many people stopped buying CDs because of MP3s, how many people stopped buying CDs because of the slow ecnomy, how many people stopped buying CDs because of the prices, etc. It's all just biased statistics based on small samples, coupled with opposite views of the situation that are equally valid and logical.
Re:Obviously, it does affect CD sales to SOME exte (Score:2)
That being said, I think that the *single biggest factor* is that the record industry, by targeting Napster has left a serious sense of betrayal with their would-be customers. I personally knew many people that simply stopped buying CD's after Napster. And I personally only buy foreign artists anyway, so the RIAA companies don't get a whole lot from me
So is it artistic doldrums? Probably to some extent. Is it MP3s being downloaded? Maybe a little. But is it the industry treating their customers like crooks? You bet.
The horse is dead (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The horse is dead (Score:2)
My penis is sore... keep beating it.
(Had to be said. No really, it DID have to be said.)
Get a clue (Score:1, Insightful)
Oh well, I also hate the assumption that if I got if for free, then it's lost revenue, when I would have gone without rather than pay for it.
blah blah blah
Re:Get a clue (Score:2)
(Slow down cowboy...)
RADIO FREE SLASHDOT (Score:1)
Lady, I'm your knight in shining armor and I love you.
You have made me what I am and I am yours.
My love, there's so many ways I want to say I love you.
Let me hold you in my arms forever more.
You have gone and made me such a fool
I'm so lost in your love.
And oh, we belong together
Won't you believe in my song?
Lady, for so many years I thought I'd never find you.
You have come into my life and made me whole.
Forever let me wake to see you each and every morning.
Let me hear you whisper softly in my ear.
In my eyes I see no one else but you.
There's no other love like our love.
And yes, oh yes, I'll always want you near me.
I've waited for you so long.
Lady, your love's the only love I need
And beside me is where I want you to be.
Cause, my love, there's something I want you to know,
You're the love of my life, you're my lady
Sad news ... Stephen King dead at 54 (Score:1)
I just heard some sad news on talk radio - Horror/Sci Fi writer Stephen King was found dead in his Maine home this morning. There weren't any more details. I'm sure everyone in the Slashdot community will miss him - even if you didn't enjoy his work, there's no denying his contributions to popular culture. Truly an American icon.
Might it possibly be....? (Score:5, Interesting)
Hmmm?
Might we be sick and tired of their power plays and their intrusions into our personal lives?
Hmmmm?
Might we be sick and tired of being called criminals by them?
Hmmm?
Could we be tired of ther inane music they've been producing the past few years?
Hmmm?
Well, My Leibowitz...what do you think??
Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:5, Insightful)
Heck, you can throw away the term "boycott".
I'd say that part of the reduced sales is simply "pissed off customers".
And it's not like there's a single reason for people to be pissed off, take your pick:
(1) Irritating the hell out of everyone by inturrupting the grammy's with a stupid-ass antipiracy speech.
(2) Numerous prominent artists publicly complaining about RIAA's hideous contracts and treatment of artists. Everyone particularly loved the "10% breakage allowance" on CD's deducted from artist royalties.
(3) Pricing.
(4) Packaging (in particular a desire for singles).
(5) Killing Napster.
(6) Having no respect for the customer.
(7) Reffering their customers pirates and thieves.
(8) Making legal threats against a college professor for presenting research at a science conferrence.
(9) releasing (mostly planning to release) crippled CD's.
(10) Pushing for a law allowing them to hack people's computers.
(11) RIAA's "work for hire" bill, a proposed copyright amendment which would steal the permanent right to songs from the artists and hand it to the labels.
(12) Federal Trade Commission finding the Recording industry cartel anti-competitve and engaged in illegal price-fixing.
(13) Hiring companies to flood P2P networks with bogus files.
(14) Failure to keep up with reality and sell music downloads (their sorely belated attempt at this was nothing short of insulting).
(15) I still blame them for killing Digital Audio Tape, a perfectly good technology. The Audio Home Recording Act mandated that it must include DRM and that cassettes and players carry a tax to balance piracy estimates. The DRM made it useless and the tax inflated the prices.
And those are just the ones off the top of my head. I'm sure there's plenty more.
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Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:2)
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Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:2, Insightful)
18) End of the "rebuy music collection on CD" era
19) Massive rise of computer gaming as a major money industry, competing with music
RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:4, Insightful)
That is EXACTLY the problem we're still facing in the record industry. I believe it's high time the Antitrust Division of the DoJ go after the RIAA and force them to lower album-length audio CD prices to around US$11 per disc; the current US$18 per disc price is at a point where there is just too much economic incentive to pirate music. A good comparison is OPEC; in the late 1970's they raised prices so high that people were either reducing oil consumption and/or looking for alternate sources of oil. By 1986, OPEC was in dire straits due to economic realities catching up with them.
Compare this against the movie industry. The fact that new-release DVD movies are between US$20 to US$30 per release set is extremely reasonable, especially when you consider new releases often contain a plethora of extra features in regards to the movie. And you can often get older movie releases for under US$15. At these prices, there is no real incentive in making a pirate copy DVD, to say the least.
Re:RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:2)
Yeah, just what we need...more government involvement. Just because the RIAA charges outlandish prices for material of questionable quality doesn't justify stealing what one doesn't feel like paying for. Just break the crack habit, and stop STOP BUYING THE FREAKING CDS!!!! How hard *is* that?
Re:RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:2)
It's high time that the DoJ go after them, because the RIAA is just about the entire music industry in the USA nowadays.
Re:RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:2)
This would seem to lend further support for my point. The FTC probably won't do anything serious, because it probably realizes that the best and most effective way to solve this problem is through normal market dynamics. Entertainment isn't like pharmaceuticals, automobiles, or medical care, where people's lives depend on fairness and accuracy. Entertainment is a diversion, and there are substitutions (even less costly ones) that are readily available. What we need is not FTC involvement, but for consumers to get off their lazy butts, break their crack addiction, and make the market work.
Re: RIAA as cartel versus chocolate as cartel (Score:2)
No, this is a choice being made by the same people whining about the RIAA. No one is holding a gun to anyone's head forcing them to download MP3 files.
As for the FTC not regulating because it's a diversion, I read a piece in BusinessWeek today about the possibility of Nestlé chocolate company buying Hershey's.
Well, there are certainly some potential anti-trust issues at stake here. But, since the RIAA is an association which represents several competing entities, they're quite obviously not subject to the same rules.
Re:RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:2)
Re:RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:2)
Re:RIAA acting as cartel is the problem! (Score:2)
Actually, living without music is pretty hard. But big part of the problem is that I can't easily tell which CDs are part of the RIAA cartel and which aren't.
I buy a lot CDs that are off the beaten track (i.e. jazz and blues from small labels). This summer I bought several CDs directly from the artists after a concert.
Is there a way for us to tell a difference between RIAA and non-RIAA music?
Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:2, Funny)
Hey, just because the search feature on slashdot doesn't recognize two letter words doesn't mean you don't have to......
(7) Reffering to their customers as pirates and thieves.
I am not a dang "grammatical error junkie" ! I just put 2 and 2 together.....
Re:Might it possibly be....? (Score:2)
What we need to do (Score:2)
So, if this resonates, feel free to write me.
Re:What we need to do (Score:2)
Who cares anymore (Score:3, Insightful)
However, it's gone on, and on, and on. So, can we just, for once, sum up:
Yes, downloading music from the internet hurts CD sales. Of course it does, but so does listening to the radio, and so do blank cassettes and mini-discs. It also helps to promote CD sales, in the same way that radio, tapes, and minidiscs so.
Nobody will *ever* be able to do a comprehensive study of this, because it depends who you ask. Ask a load of geeks, and they'll probably say that yes, they do download MP3s, but the quality is inferior, so they buy the CDs they can afford. They will proably also mention that CDs are overpriced, and that on a technical note, just about any copy protection could be broken.
Ask the average 'man in the street', who is computer-literate, and he'll probably say, yes, he does listen to MP3s, and that he doesn't even care whether he is infringing copyright or not, because he doesn't really know much about it. He probably thinks of downloading music as being as bad as copying a friends CD.
Personally, I think that people should stop trading music illegally, and put pressure on local shops to allow previewing of CDs. Otherwise, you're just playing in to the hands of the record companies.
Oh, and as for the people who complain about the inferior quality of copy protected CDs, most of you are lying, especially when you listen on cheap speakers, about 5 metres from a pnumatic drill. It is more to do with incompetent recording engineers who know nothing about how to master a CD, (over compressing it, normalising the tracks unnecessarily, letting the level repeatedly hit 0dB on the masters, etc, etc).
Re:Who cares anymore (Score:2)
That's another reason radio, and MP3s, are so successful as "free samples": they don't require much effort on the part of the listener, and you can do other things while the radio plays or the MP3 downloads. You aren't chained to the CD store's counter while you're making up your mind.
In fact, MP3s would be MORE successful as "free samples" (regardless of what you're selling, free samples are the cheapeast and most effective advertising tool in existence) if the RIAA machine would USE them as a marketing tool, and make them even easier to find and download.
Re:Who cares anymore (Score:2)
The advantage I've found in those small shops is service. You come in looking for some oddball album, and they can tell you right off if it's available or not, and whether they can get it, and when/if they DO get it in, they're willing to hold it for you. Try that in one of the big chain stores!!
Re:Who cares anymore (Score:2)
Lying: a nitpick (Score:2)
No (Score:2)
Obviously they are going to loose sales.
The largest persentage of their prime audience has stopped buying.
Clueless Bastards (tm)
Re:No (Score:2)
ObAOL: Me too!
Now when for $18 I can choose between a CD with less than 60 minutes of GOOD music
You mean about ten minutes of good music, MAX. It's been a long time since I bought a CD that had more than three songs on it that I like (I can think of two CDs released in the past two years that fit that bill).
And no, I'm not really boycotting the RIAA. There's just nothing good out, lately. I *am* boycotting BestBuy for their copy protection support. But I'm not dl'ing that much music, either. I'm listening to the stuff I've got, or, weird radio [artbell.com].
Re:No (Score:2)
You are giving me lessons? Are you kidding?
Lousy Artists and Pissed off Public (Score:2)
Most places can manufacture a one hit wonder. Take those pop stars [superpopstars.com] from those TV show contests [vze.com]. Nice kids, but potentially ruined by the business angles running them ragged.
But it takes a completely different level of artist to sustain originality. this seems to have been beaten to death by the industry
Give me a local garage man these days
decline in CD sales (Score:2)
Internet, not MP3s, is hurting CD sales. (Score:3, Insightful)
With the current generation of high school students, a great many of them think 'why spend ANY money on recorded music at all?' They get all of their music off of the internet and divert their recreational dollars to video games or DVDs or whatever. One albun sale is not being shared among a half dozen friends but 'shared' among ten thousand strangers.
You get what you pay for (Score:2)
The answer is that you get what you pay for. The quality of an MP3 is much lower than the quality of a CD. Sure, it is digital. But there are errors made in copying a CD to a computer, and even more errors made when converting from spacial domain to discrete cosine domain (and back during decoding). The truncation of certian frequencies doesn't help much; they cut off a little of the audible range for those of us with more acute senses of hearing.
I bought a CD so that I'd be able to enjoy the song more; it was worth it because I like the song enough to care. Maybe I won't be able to tell the difference between CDs and wavelet transformed copies, but we don't have a lot of those yet. So to me, MP3s are a little like high quality tapes- still not quite as good as having the CD.
Re:You get what you pay for (Score:2)
Without citing a bitrate, you may as well listen toa 64-bit encoded version and say, "MP3 sounds like 3rd-generation taped copies! This sucks!"
Treat sharing as promotion and reward sales (Score:4, Informative)
Historically, some companies have tried to solve this problem using various techniques (publishing, advances, royalty payments, advertising-supported broadcasting, pledge drives). All of these are predicated on economies of scale for large runs, and high costs of entry for competitors.
When a new technology comes along that changes these economics, it is time to look for a new model [mediagora.com] to solve the underlying problem, not construct a technical and legislative framework to restore the old barriers.
Re:Treat sharing as promotion and reward sales (Score:4, Interesting)
1) Record an album, using completely independent producers and recording facilities.
2) Release the entire album as MP3s, on your own website. (Or save yourself bandwidth, and release it to some P2P network, with an id3 comment tag that points at your site, making it easy for filesharers to find you.)
3) Make it REAL easy, and inexpensive, for anyone who visits your site to buy the CD.
4) Profit.
You will notice that nowhere in this scenario does a dime go to the RIAA. And *that* is exactly WHY the RIAA (and the MPAA, tho independent film production takes a lot more horsepower and know-how than independent album production) is trying to stomp out MP3s in particular and filesharing in general: when the artist discovers that the MP3 is a better promotional tool than the RIAA machine, the consequent shift in production/release methods cuts the RIAA out of the financial loop.
Yet if the RIAA had a clue, they could be jumping on this bandwagon and adding to their own profits. In particular, it would boost sales of marginal artists that they now [claim to] lose money on.
Re:That would be true... (Score:2)
The sharers can choose between giving it away illegally, or getting paid for making sales.
Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:4, Insightful)
So, not looking for free publicity to boost book sales then.
In May, Liebowitz published a paper suggesting that the record industry would soon be seriously harmed by MP3s. But in June, by the time Salon caught up with him, he was questioning his own conclusions after having examined the numbers and finding little solid proof that file sharing was hurting CD sales. Two months later, he's changed his mind again
So, this respected researcher has changed his mind three times in 4 months . Perhaps he should think and formulate a well conceived, intelligent opinion before opening his mouth next time - is this guy the salon version of the first post trolls ?
You don't publish a paper, then change your mind about your own conclusions less than a month later, then change your mind yet again, and expect to be taken seriously.
If it were the case that there was a 9.8 percent drop on albums, when you look at the historical record of the ups and downs of the CD industry, [that's] a bigger decline than we've seen in 30 years. It starts to look unusual.
Except, that a) we're in a recession, b) teenage disposable income is now spilt between DVDs, Games and CDs c) bland mass appeal music always sees a drop in sales - see the RIAA's "Home taping is killing music" campaign in the late disco, pre punk era.
If he thinks the drop is unusual then he isn't checking his historical data correctly. In addition, how can he explain the INCREASE in CD sales in the UK last year ? We have Napster too yer know.
It's really amazing how (CD) prices have tracked so closely with inflation. It's almost as if the industry just bumps up prices with the inflation rate
No shit Sherlock...
[What is clear is that] there's no evidence in the data that the tapes caused a decline.
MP3s wouldn't do the same thing. The reason cassettes led to growth was that before cassettes existed, you didn't have portable music. You couldn't play recorded music in your car, and you couldn't play it walking around, in a Walkman. It was the little cassette that basically allowed you to do that. To be technically correct, there were 8- track players prior to cassettes. But they didn't have quite the same penetration. My theory as to what went on is that [the rise in cassettes] coincides almost perfectly with the penetration rate of the portable, Walkman-type of thing. So it opened up this whole new market, which overwhelmed any copying that went on.
Oh dear.
Well 1) Most people didn't have recordable 8 tracks, so no, the 8 track WASN'T the same as musiccassettes. 2)We have new mediums now, such as the MP3 player, so according to your "theory" that should overwhelm any copying.
If people bought albums in the 80's specifically for the purpose of taping them for their new toy the walkman, then isn't the same going to happen now ? We should see an increase in up tempo running/jogging music, with the advent of solid state MP3 players which are finally immune to jumping, skipping and damage from violent movement.
So, either I'm going to see lots of hard cord techno stars from Germany and the UK become millionares as their record sales boom, or I'm going to see you change your mind about your pet theories yet again, probably just in time for the official release of your book.
Did Stan escape from Dallas University's, locked room, infinite monkeys on typewriters experiment ?
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2, Insightful)
Honest researchers change their minds when new data suggests that they should. They don't hold on to pet theories if the data contradicts those theories, you idiot. Thats what makes him a degreed economist and you a moron.
Just because you don't like what the evidence might suggest doesn't mean he's wrong.
"If it were the case that there was a 9.8 percent drop on albums, when you look at the historical record of the ups and downs of the CD industry, [that's] a bigger decline than we've seen in 30 years. It starts to look unusual. "
Except, that a) we're in a recession, b) teenage disposable income is now spilt between DVDs, Games and CDs c) bland mass appeal music always sees a drop in sales - see the RIAA's "Home taping is killing music" campaign in the late disco, pre punk era.
He just said it looks unusual in the past 30 years -- 30 years which include recessions, splits in teenage income, and changes in mass appeal. He's already taking into account these things. Christ, you're stupid.
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
conceived, intelligent opinion before opening his mouth next time - is this guy the salon version of the first post trolls ?
Honest researchers change their minds when new data suggests that they should. They don't hold on to pet theories if the data contradicts those theories
Try taking something in context next time. (ie. quote the whole reference.)
He didn't say that changing one's mind is the sign of a poor researcher, but that repeatedly changing one's mind in a short period of time is. I'd find it hard to believe that an honest researcher can formulate a well conceived, intelligent opinion three times in four months; to suggest that this is simply the result of new data is naieve in the extreme - if he's discovering new data that fast, then his opinions can't possibly be thought out very well.
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:3, Insightful)
WRONG. This might be news to you, but there is some latency between having an opinion, and having that opinion published in a journal. The submission/review process is quite lengthy. I would guess that it took about 6 months, and the research took a few months also. To the extent that he "changed his mind", he probably did so over the period of close to a year.
Perhaps he should think and formulate a well conceived, intelligent opinion before opening his mouth next time - is this guy the salon version of the first post trolls ?
I'm going to momentarily ignore the fact that this viscious verbal assault is based on a false premise, and address the fact that he re-evaluated his position.
Unlike the slashdot herd, he is constantly re-evaluating his position with a critical eye and some intellectual honesty, instead of foaming at the mouth and spewing dogma. This is what scientists are supposed to do-- think critically, as opposed to spewing dogma. Far from completely changing his mind, these apparent changes are really a gradual convergence towards him converging to the truth. At first, he had some argument that it would hurt the industry. Further analysis offered a possible counter-argument to that, but an appraisal of that counter-argument showed that he had it right the first time.
You don't publish a paper, then change your mind about your own conclusions less than a month later, then change your mind yet again, and expect to be taken seriously.
I don't see why you can't offer counter-arguments to your own writing. To do so is the hallmark of intellectual honesty, something that you mistakenly consider to be a weakness. It's not like he's doing a complete U-turn.
Except, that a) we're in a recession, b) teenage disposable income is now spilt between DVDs, Games and CDs c) bland mass appeal music always sees a drop in sales
The crux of his argument is that this is not the case, or to be more precise, recessions hurt music sales, but they don't hurt them that much. Ranting on slashdot that it isn't so is not much of a rebuttal.
2)We have new mediums now, such as the MP3 player, so according to your "theory" that should overwhelm any copying.
That's not true. The MP3 only provides a new medium, but the cassette provided new functionality. That is, the point of the cassette is that you didn't have portability before then. Of course MP3s also offer portability, but that portability isn't new anymore.
If people bought albums in the 80's specifically for the purpose of taping them for their new toy the walkman, then isn't the same going to happen now ?
Yes, but this won't result in an increase in sales, because they could already buy albums to record for the purpose of jogging. The only difference is that there will be a new mediium. Or to put it another way, MP3s do not create a market that didn't already exist (or at least, you have not argued that this is the case)
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:3, Insightful)
Except he changed his mind yet again, within 2 months - June - August. I don't expect him to stick dogmatically to one opinion - I do expect him to perhaps stop giving book sales boosting interviews if his research is so inconclusive as to cause him to change his mind every other month. Admitting you were wrong is laudable, admitting you were wrong, "no I wasn't", "Yes I was" "I was wrong about being wrong", "I was wrong about being wrong about being wrong" just makes you look stupid. A researcher not looking for regular press interviews would have reached the conclusion that research into this area is inconclusive.
It's not like he's doing a complete U-turn.
But he did offer a U-Turn, then U-Turned back, in the space of 2 months. . Re-evaluting your position is all well and good, but if you can change your opinion so easily and quickly and regularly, then perhaps a little more thought is needed before publically making a statement is required. I'm a lecturer, if I publish a paper, go on record as stating my paper is now wrong, then a few weeks later go on record as stating my previous statement about being wrong, is wrong, I am going to look like an idiot to my peers, it's going to look like I'm publishing before I'm ready, just to get press.
he crux of his argument is that this is not the case, or to be more precise, recessions hurt music sales, but they don't hurt them that much. Ranting on slashdot that it isn't so is not much of a rebuttal.
The crux of his argument is that MP3 downloading seriously damages sales. It isn't so.
Perhaps the BBC [bbc.co.uk] is "ranting" also ?
As I stated - the UK had Napster, Guntella, WinMX, Musiccity and so on, yet UK sales increased by 5% last year. Or is Great Britain a statistical blip in Stan's ever changing world view ?
Yes, but this won't result in an increase in sales, because they could already buy albums to record for the purpose of jogging. The only difference is that there will be a new mediium. Or to put it another way, MP3s do not create a market that didn't already exist (or at least, you have not argued that this is the case)
Wrong.
As I previously stated - Solid state MP3 players allow people to jog or do violent exercise, where previous walkmans, discmans, mini-disc players and so forth would jump and skip. Therefore, the MP3 player is a new medium, and music ideal for such activity - 140 BPM 4/4 beat techno, should see an increase in sales, based on his argument that a new medium results in new sales.
The fact is, for every RIAA sponsored study that states the MP3 format is killing music, another study will prove otherwise. An academic who changes his position with the changing of the seasons, openly plugging a book every time he does so, rather than arguing that research is currently inconclusive, is worthy of scorn.
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
As I stated - the UK had Napster, Guntella, WinMX, Musiccity and so on, yet UK sales increased by 5% last year.
What's the penetration of broadband Internet access in the UK?
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
That's not what the article says. Here's a quote:
In other words, he was re-considering his position. It is not clear that he changed his mind at all.
The crux of his argument is that MP3 downloading seriously damages sales. It isn't so. Perhaps the BBC [bbc.co.uk] is "ranting" also ?
The impact of broadband is not necessarily going to be the same in the UK as it is in the US.
As I previously stated - Solid state MP3 players allow people to jog or do violent exercise, where previous walkmans, discmans, mini-disc players and so forth would jump and skip. Therefore, the MP3 player is a new medium, and music ideal for such activity - 140 BPM 4/4 beat techno, should see an increase in sales, based on his argument that a new medium results in new sales.
People have been doing exercise with cassette players for years.
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
The Salon article is sloppily worded, so I disagree with the latter remark. As for the former, it's not clear (to me, anyway) that he didn't do any examination of the numbers.
In 2001 it used to take me 2 - 3 hours on an unmetered narrowband line to download an entire album, hardly a big deal. 128k Cable access was highly popular then too. Would waiting 2 - 3 hours have put people off ?
I rarely download anything that takes that long (meaning I don't remember doing it). It is inconvenient. You need to tie up your phone line for that time, and I have better things to do with my connection, my phone line, and my time. It's even worse if you're a kid living with your parents-- they will not want you monopolising the phone line.
only having to wait 2 or 3 hours to get a free album would not have put stopped anyone,
People who've moved out of home consider their time more valuable than this, people who live with their parents share a phone line with the family. Your 3 hour time line also assumes that the search for a complete album is instantaneous, and the download completes uninterrupted.
it's the great demon P2P and his mysterious sidekick, ADSL.
Well it's true. P2P is bandwidth intensive (hence the problems with cable companies limiting bandwidth).
When record sales remain bouyant in the UK next year, following this summers broadband explosion, what excuse are you going to use then ?
You're speculating. But like Liebowitz, I'm prepared to reevaluate my position if there is new data available that appears to contradict it.
You obviously don't work out much
3x/week weights 5x1hr/week cardio. Tapes have their problems, but that didn't stop people using them. But I certainly agree that MP3 players are better than tapes for this.
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
heh. you're right there. I'm in marathon training for the Montreal 1/2 Marathon in April, and I post frequently on a runners' discussion forum. We're always having conversations about the best mp3 player for running, who's bought what CDs to listen to while they run, etc. My vote right now goes for the Nike PSA120, which I'm looking at buying once I hit week 10 of my training program, as a reward. That thing's just perfect for runners, and even comes with an arm band to wear it on
claudia
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
That in itself is an interesting fact though... That a professional economist can't decide whether or not music piracy has a statistically significant effect on sales should tell you something. (even if there is a statistically significant effect, its magnitude is likely to be quite small...)
To wit, Liebowitz notes that the impact of piracy on sales is not likely to be greater than 20%. If I were a record company I would be thrilled to learn this... It means I can offer just what customers want - plaintext (DRM-free) music for sale over the internet, at various price points - which would doubtlessly offset the 20% sales impact of unlicensed uses. (keep in mind that Liebowitz' figures are based on today's large record companies, which offer virtually no legal for-pay downloads of popular/hit music)
(but the RIAA is not thrilled, which should tell you that piracy isn't what worries them - its the loss of their god-like control over promotion and distribution which the internet is bringing about...)
Re:Stan Liebowitz - an embarassment to Dallas Edu (Score:2)
Re:Stan Liebowitz - a sign of the future? (Score:2)
It could (and will) get worse. Just like the tobacco industry, the IP empires are fighting to maintain a position of power, and will use any tool possible. Even more studies will be appearing, showing just how much was lost in revenues that should have gone to the "rightful" owners.
To be quite honest, these numbers are all "coulda, woulda" fantasy. Lots of people copy software, photocopy books and articles and trade software that they had no real intention of buying. And there are real-life for-profit "pirates", though I prefer to call them "counterfeiters", but I've never met them nor seen their goods.
One other thing that *really* irritates and scares the IP empires is the way intellectual property leaks out *before* it is supposed to be released. That's what kicked off the Metallica v. Napster thingie, and why Apple attacks rumor sites that post "sneak previews" of their new machines.
The IP empires hate it when IP escapes before it can be buried. Studios have been known to sit on albums after recording, just to punish the artist. P2P networks offer a way to "smuggle" such works out into the open where they can be freely traded. It robs them of one of their favorite weapons.
And that's what it's all about, and why studies like this are the new battleground. It's less about the money, but about controlling who gets to see/hear what, and for what price.
(sigh...)
I don't know why I had to rant for so long like this. I guess it's because the next have/have-not battle is going to be over IP. Stallman is this generation's Karl Marx, and Disney is the "evil capitalist" bent on maintaining power. It will be interesting to follow...
I know I buy more (Score:2)
Downloaded mp3s are handy and quick, but they aren't generally very good quality, and loose mp3s are "unwieldy". So I tend to actually *buy* the CD, both for the additional tracks and for the ability to rip them the way I want them ripped. This is especially true of singles/mixes.
Where I think the whole file sharing really helps is I *constantly* find older/newer/different music that I've forgotten about or didn't know existed.. different mixes, original recordings, other artists.. all types of things.
Since I've started downloading mp3s my cd collection has consistantly increased.. because I'd rather know it was ripped right and I like having an archived copy. Before filesharing I was basically done buying CDs. I've probably bought 2-4 every week since I started downloading.
I'm sure there are people out there that aren't buying any of their music, but it certainly isn't everyone.
I buy a lot more cds because of file sharing. And I've completely lost the feeling of "buyers remorse" over buying CDs. Even when I buy one that only had 1 good track on it. Because I wanted that track.
Re:I know I buy more (Score:2)
As has been pointed out before, MP3s and back catalogs are a match made in marketing heaven, if only the RIAA gave a damn about anything but restricting us, and the artists, to the RIAA's marketing machine.
I was a free man in Paris
I felt unfettered and alive
There was nobody calling me up for favors
And no one's future to decide
You know I'd go back there tomorrow
But for the work I've taken on
Stoking the star maker machinery
Behind the popular song
-- Joni Mitchell, "Free Man in Paris" (1973)
http://www.jonimitchell.com/HitsParis74.html
Economy? (Score:3)
Re:Economy? (Score:2)
We live in a golden-age today by comparison. Of course, things could get worse.
At least someone is being realistic. (Score:2)
I liked this quote:
The net effect of tapes was positive. But it doesn't mean that it wouldn't have been more positive if people weren't making more copies. [What is clear is that] there's no evidence in the data that the tapes caused a decline.
That's one think I noticed from previous stories on this issue. Readers are always quick to point out that sales increased during the Napster years, but they overlook the fact that the sales were also decelerating at that point. You can't just look at a simplistic side-by-side comparison and expect to jump to a fair conclusion.
-a
call him captain obvious (Score:2)
I mean, duh. Of COURSE the trading of mp3's is going to effect the sale of CD's. The only question that remains is to gauge what percentage the decline in sales mp3's are responsible for.. which appears to be precisely the problem he's grappling with.
Is it 0.0000001%, or 10%, or 50%?
He said it best himself:
"It is certainly not conclusive, by any means, that there's real damage going on from MP3s. [...] We're seeing a medium impact, which still could be explained by other things -- but we can't discount the MP3 possibility."
Which makes sense to me.
this is so easy to prove! (Score:5, Funny)
You need 1) a time machine, 2) ability to access to the many-worlds multiverse, and 3) access to the album sale data.
Just set your time machine back to sometime before Fanning writes the first Napster code. Then, choose a universe where he falls madly in love with a lovely blonde, and gets rid of "that stupid computer" at her request. Monitor CD sales for the next couple of years.
Next, choose the current universe (or maybe one exactly like this one, except where nobody thought of this experiment, just in case there's some weird time looping feedback thing going on). Monitor CD sales for the same period.
Then, you'll be able to say if Napster and file sharing affected the music industry, all other things being equal.
I swear, I bet these so-called "economists" can't even change the gravitational constant of the universe!
Napster may well be responsible for this... (Score:2)
We can deduce from the rediculously inflated price of CDs, the assumption that we are all thieves, and the total lack of diversity in the music that they premote that they don't serve the consumer.
It is therefore clear that the only people whose interests the record industry serves are their own, and they do nothing for us (short of lobby congress to restrict our digital freedoms) - so why should we buy from them?
Re:Napster may well be responsible for this... (Score:2)
How can you say they are ridiculously priced when the article points out that, when adjusted for inflation, the price of CD's has remained about constant over 30 years? There has been effectively NO CHANGE in cost.
Re:Napster may well be responsible for this... (Score:2)
Soon-to-be author changes conclusions again (Score:4, Interesting)
If congress is in your pocket (Score:2)
Maybe not, but if you have congress in your pocket you can drag the whole country to hell trying.
Music Industry is Slowly Catching On (Score:2)
A faint hint at their next move might be this [slashdot.org], which would be to change their distribution media. That will certainly fail to the classic "if I can hear it I can copy it."
So what's next? Will they finally understand their business model needs changed? I don't know what other option is left for them. Once that ends up as the only choice, they'll either fade into oblivion or do it. I don't think we need to wait much longer because they're really flailing about trying lots of things at once right now and nothing is working.
When it does happen, I predict it's gonna hit hard and fast. They'll try a radically new model and some artists will use the transition time to jump ship and sell their own music directly. It really wouldn't surprise me if the RIAA forked and became multiple entities, each competing with the other using a slightly different business model. Some of you are thinking "yeah, sure, like that'll happen." All the signs are there though. They act like they're in control but they know they're not. Just wait.
Lies, damned lies and . . . . (Score:3, Insightful)
In the case of music sales, the industry has a long history of manipulation of sales figures to support various ends. With the recent focus on bogus corporate accounts, I think its gong to be very difficult to get a clear picture.
If the music industry wants to claim that file sharing is hurting sales, I would expect them to bend the numbers to prove this.
It's not the MP3s, it's the CD-R drives... (Score:5, Insightful)
It still all revolves around CD burners. Take the current MP3 situation and subtract being able to burn CDs. Sure, there's portable MP3 players, but the REAL album-purchase-killer is being able to actually have that shiny disc with the music on it in your hot little hands. Most of my friends who aren't interested in computers know that us computer geeks can burn CDs and won't hesitate to ask for a copy of the latest albums or songs they can't get out of their head.
Do you actually tell your friends that they have to go out and spend money on something you can burn for them on an inexpensive blank CD? "Come on, you're supposed to be my friend... Help me out here." Unlike home taping of the past, CD-RW drives have become VERY fast as of late... A C90 tape actually took 45 minutes per side (yes, it had to be flipped) to record, a 40X CD-RW can burn an entire CD in less than 8. CPUs have become much faster as well. It's become a whole lot easier to fire up your CD-R mastering software in the background and burn CDs while you're say, reading Slashdot.
When a friend asked for a copy of a tape, it meant rewinding, analog distortion, getting the levels right, and FLIPPING THE DAMN TAPE. Burning is just a blank CD and a few clicks away.
Not to be pedantic.... (Score:2)
Make them buy Music CD's (Score:2)
The following things (might) affect CD sales: (Score:2, Interesting)
Audio CD's too expensive for what you get (Score:3, Interesting)
Think about it for these reasons:
1) Today's videogame consoles cost between US$150 and US$200, but many games give you 30 to 60 hours of fun to play all the way through; in the case of sports games (like the excellent Madden NFL 2003), it's even longer than that. It's that time you spend on the game that makes the relative high cost of a game (around US$40 to US$50) still a pretty good bargain.
2) The DVD has also become a major bargain; you can get pretty good console players for under US$100, and the price of DVD discs (US$20 to US$30 for the latest releases, frequently under US$15 for the older releases) are a bargain considering the content of what you get. The MPAA (despite what people here on
They lost my business (Score:3, Insightful)
The only thing I regret is buying all the CDs I did before I saw the RIAA's true colours.
hypocrisy (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't mind admitting that these days I only go out to buy a CD if, after arsing around with gnutella for a day or two, I still haven't found it. If there was a "perfect" file sharing network, I'd never buy a CD again.
You might say, "you do this because CDs are overprized" (even more true here in the Netherlands than in most other parts of the world). To which my honest reply would have to be, "if CD prizes were cut by 50%, I would only cut the time I spend trying to find one on the net by 50% before giving up and buying it".
My bottom line is, if p2p networks worked perfectly, I'd never pay for music, regardless of how reasonable the price might be.
Re:hypocrisy (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:hypocrisy (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, fuck you for being a cheap sod and making it hard for music lovers who actually want to give something back, and giving the RIAA an excuse to DRM the fuck out of everything.
Re:hypocrisy (Score:3, Insightful)
Thanks for being honest. The only way these artists make any decent money is to gig anyway, which is the most fun part of being a musician, to me. It's also a shame they don't own their song rights anyway, so really you're only hurting the very industry that's turned it's back on artists to their own avarice...
Do you buy CD's from independent artists you see about town when you go out? Or, do you not check out local bands? Just curious...
C'mon, michael! (Score:2)
Michael, why do you bother to post something like this to Slashdot? We can draw no conclusions from this at all, because there is no evidence here to speak of. I'm not saying that it's impossible that file sharing may be damaging music sales, but this article gives us no reason to conclude that it's really happening.
I really thought that geeks had a better understandng of statistics, and when they do or do not give real evidence of possible underlying causes, than most people have. Of course, numbers are terribly tempting, they create such a powerful feeling of objectivity and proof; but they can also create myths that are nearly impossible to debunk because "everybody says so" and "I heard it on the news" and it all sounds so believable.
The media, and that includes Slashdot, have a strong role in creating such myths by simply regurgitating statistical claims without any regard to the quality of the analysis. Michael, you have some editorial discretion, and you ought to use it. I'm not saying that Slashdot shouldn't post articles on the subject, but I think they certainly shouldn't bother if it just means that untrustworthy claims of fact get propagated further.
Stating the obvious... (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, *of course* it's due to mp3 downloading. The question they should ask themselves is: WHY are the mp3 downloaded so much? Because we don't care about the artists and like to get free music? Or because we don't think there is any other options because of high prices where a big percentage does NOT go to the artist?
Re:Stating the obvious... (Score:2)
I'm sure it has in SoundScan and RIAA measures (Score:2, Insightful)
MP3's and the economy (Score:2, Insightful)
Now that the economy is taking a nose dive, leisure money is being conserved, and relying solely on MP3's has become a viable option to cost cutting consumers.
But I still have another question-- how much of the decline in CD sales is because of MP3's, and how much of the decline is because of the RIAA's response to MP3's? Millions of people saw the smash of Napster. Didn't this harm any loyalty, sympathy or compassion to the record labels? Many people's remnant interest in purchasing CD's was affected by the RIAA squashing their fun.
Now that the economy is bad, consumers feel they have less money to spend on luxuries. And what money they have, why would they spend it on the lawyer-happy record labels threatening to sue/hack even those very consumers? I mean, doesn't this make it feel like any dollar you give them is a dollar they can use to run companies out of business and threaten consumers?
Correlation does not equal causation... (Score:2, Insightful)
In other words, "I have no proof, but I'll just make this unfounded assertion..."
I wonder if he's selling Tiger repellent as well.
Harming the music industry my ass (Score:2)
Similarly for most people the vast majority of the time.
Also, lets not forget, that there was NO EFFECT -- NONE WHAT-SO-EVER -- observed in CD sales until the recession begin. NONE. So, gee, I wonder what's really causing this downturn in sales.
The economies in a recession, does the RIAA really expect people to buy as many CD's? DVD's are becoming more and more popular and commonplace, as are computer games, and game-consoles...does the RIAA really think that teens will still buy as many CD's, even with all the competition offering vastly superior value? Descent 3 [amazon.com] and Descent 2 [amazon.com] each go for 10 bucks from Amazon.com. That means you could buy both of them for the same price as ONE CD. Now, you decide. What's better, Descent 3 and Descent 2, games from which you can get months of enjoyment from in single-player mode, years in multi-player, or a single CD, which you can get maybe an hours worth of enjoyment out of? Tomb Raider 5, 4, and 3 sell for 20 bucks a piece from Amazon.com, while Tomb Raider 1 and 2 go for around 10. Any of these would be be better than having a music CD. The latest greatest game that I like -- Eternal Darkness [amazon.com] sells for 50 bucks from Amazon.com, 32 bucks used. Again, a better deal than a music CD.
Jurassic Park and The Lost World sell for 24 bucks a piece off of Amazon.com. Much better value than any music CD I've seen. Jaws is also available for 24 bucks, along with many other great movies.
So, competition from outside the music world BLOWS music CD's away in terms of value.
Maybe it's Clear Channel (Score:2)
The funniest thing about this is that the music industry, which is basically frivolous, has more political clout than the computer industry, which is both more useful and much bigger.
Re:First! (Score:2)
From the article:
No, "music from yesterday isn't available" (Score:3, Interesting)
As one example, I still can't buy Isao Tomita's "Bolero" album on CD. You can get "Bolero" itself as a single track of a collection (who would want 10 different versions of the same song, just to get the one you wanted?!?), but you don't get "The Mother Goose Suite", "Daphnis and Chloe: Suite No. 2", or "Pavan for a Dead Princess".
As another, I can't get a "Baltimora" album, except as used vinyl (if then); the only thing available on CD is one song, "Tarzan Boy" (good tune, but ruined by the "Listerine" commercial), and it's only available on "Beverly Hills Ninja" or in some *LAME* 80's dance collection (two exceptions: a cover band, and an "Italo" Italian dance CD sold in the U.S.: a *LAME* non-80's dance collection).
Frankly, I'm amaze that "Buffalo Springfield" or Harry Nilsson is available (incredibly hard to find, though).
-- Terry
Re:No, "music from yesterday isn't available" (Score:2)
Re:Somethings missing.... (Score:2)
Re:True enough (Score:2)
I mean, c'mon. There is some middle ground (called "reality") between the RIAA's inflated numbers and claiming that there's pretty much no one that's not buying CDs anymore because they can get the music for free. It's spooky to me that people would feel the need to go out of their way to claim something as absurd as "it's not having a negative effect on CD sales at all". Yeah, right.
Being dishonest like this just gives more ammunition to the RIAA and friends.
In my case, out of a collection of about 1,500 MP3s (nothing by most /.ers standards), no more than 20 or 30 are stuff I don't own. And of the music I have bought in the last two years, at least a small part of it is stuff I probably wouldn't have bought had I not heard it from an MP3. But I'm the only person I know with a significantly large MP3 collection that is made up of almost exclusively stuff that's legal. So I'm skeptical.
Re:True enough (Score:2)
This is the very point. The record industry association of america has to be unseated. For every britney speers there are a thousand voices out there that I don't get a chance to hear because they have to get through the a&r reps first. And, the labels say there's just too much crap to syphon through to get to the good stuff. That may be true, but I'd like to be the judge for myself.
Right now, you can find at least 10 times, or more original, creative content on the Internet, and that will just continue to grow if the industry doesn't shut it down. That's what they want to do, and we need to shut them down before they do it. I want all the record shelves to be empty until the consuming public gets it established in the sweat of the artists who wrote that content that most, if not all proceeds with the exception of production and marketing costs go to the person who wrote the damn song.
In the meantime, Britney can pay her rent from playing gigs, which is what she has to do anyway. Well, except for selling Pepsi, but I don't drink that, either. Stop buying CD's and go to a show!!! The artist isn't getting your money from the CD. I know, because I am one.
Re:Bullshit (Score:2)
Not true. I've been around long enough to see several cycles of good music and shitty music. The late 70's just before punk arrived was a memorable shitty spell. There were a couple more in the 80's and 90's. The (before my time) interval between Elvis and the Beatles was also pretty dismal.
I remember things being bad, and I remember them getting better. Take my word for it, the last few years have been the worst ever. I attribute it to the focus-group filtered, computer database driven playlists that Clear Channel and its ilk uses to control their radio stations. At least in the bad old days, real human greedy executives decided what got played, and they had to use their taste (good or bad) to pick the music. Now, the music on the radio is a bland predictable mush selected by computer algorithms.
As usual, this bad spell will probably be broken out of when some new music genre to hit the scene. I suspect that unlike previous cycles, this new movement will have to use a completely alternate distribution method (not CDs or radio) to avoid the current deadlock in the music industry.