User User name Password  
   
Wednesday 9.7.2008 / 05:59 AM
Search:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > news > recording industry claims anti-piracy efforts are working
Show topics
News
News

Recording Industry claims anti-piracy efforts are working

22 January 2006 16:55 by James "Dela" Delahunty | 8 comments

Recording Industry claims anti-piracy efforts are working The chairman of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), John Kennedy, has said that legal advances and key victories worldwide in the recording industry's fight against illegal file sharing were helping to contain the problem. He made his comments at the MIDEM music trade fair in Cannes. He called on Internet service providers to begin blocking Internet access to persistent illegal file sharers and condemned the French proposals to legalise online sharing of copyrighted music and movies.

Kennedy said that judgments by four courts in Australia, Korea and the United States represented "a real sea change world-wide" that would help the digital music business to grow. "We believe we are containing the problem," he said. He said that the 20,000 lawsuits against individuals in 17 separate countries "are changing consumers' attitudes". Legal downloads of single music tracks more than doubled in 2005 to 240 million.

As for the French proposals, Kennedy said he was optimistic that the French wouldn't go through with it. He said the move would kill the French music Industry. "I can't believe that at the end of the day, the French government will want this," he said. According to EMI Europe chief executive officer Jean-Francois Cecillon, just 20 million of the 1 billion tracks downloaded in France in 2005 were legally bought.

Source:
Yahoo


Permalink to this article

Get AfterDawn's news to your favourite feed reader! Share this story with your friends!
 

 
Related articles:

  • U2's manager once again decries ISP's for not policing subscribers (4 June 2008)
  • Three strikes law for internet piracy to be proposed in Britain (12 February 2008)
  • U2's manager: time to end ISPs' free ride (30 January 2008)
  • IFPI changes tone in attempt to save its image (15 April 2006)
  • BBC gets answers from Music Industry figures about digital music (24 January 2006)
  • Global music sales fell again in 2005 (23 January 2006)
  • EMI boss says digital music will cover lost CD sales (23 January 2006)
  • Entertainment Industry wants to abuse European data retention laws (27 November 2005)
  • Kazaa gets deadline to filter or shut down (25 November 2005)
  • Music industry to launch massive wave of lawsuits (15 November 2005)
  • File sharing fight given green light in Sweden (14 October 2005)
  • Music downloaders spent $790m in H1 2005 (3 October 2005)
  • IFPI Finland - 'Linux/Mac users should consider buying CD players' (22 September 2005)
  • Worldwide legal music downloads tripled (21 July 2005)
  • Music Industry wins German case against allofmp3.com (9 July 2005)
  • IFPI loses P2P case in Taiwan (1 July 2005)
  • IFPI unleashes P2P lawsuits across the world (12 April 2005)
  •  

    « Previous news article
    EMI boss condemns French move to legalise file sharing
    Next news article »
    Nintendo Revolution will cost less than $300
     Post your comment
    Discuss this article! 
    Mik3h (AfterDawn Addict) 23 January 2006 2:17 Send private message to this user   
    Oh yeah, those efforts are still working, despite the
    millions of people still using P2P..

    "He called on Internet service providers to begin blocking Internet access to persistent illegal file sharers and condemned the French proposals to legalise online sharing of copyrighted music and movies."

    They ISPs will lose a hell of a lot of customers if they start to block access to those using P2P..

    -Mike
    AIM2Shame (Junior Member) 23 January 2006 2:29 Send private message to this user   
    20,000 lawsuits... 99% of them in the U.S.

    The only people that are discontinuing P2P are the yanks.
    nonoitall (Member) 23 January 2006 10:07 Send private message to this user   
    And for every person who starts using legal music services, about 20 stop buying music altogether and start using P2P - great victory for the music industry. Hopefully France's move will kill the music industry so that artists can flourish and distribute their work without handing all their rights over to greedy labels who do nothing but soak up money that they didn't earn.
    Junito (Inactive) 24 January 2006 4:50 Send private message to this user   
    Those who purchase CD or the like, should stop altogher buying them. Is like someone punching you and then saying that they are sorry.Always trying to cut the hand that feeds them.Is too bad consumers feel they're obligated to purshase music, and not fight for thier rights.
    MrMexican (Inactive) 25 January 2006 14:20 Send private message to this user   
    I think they should stop wasting their time and ours because this is just dum. They are trying to fight a battle they can't win anymore. Probably 10 years ago they could of made a difference but not anymore. There will always be anti-piracy and they can't stop it anymore. And who is to say they don't download music for free. I wouldn't really care if they lost an extra dollar because its not there money there earning. They earn there money through the artist and without them they would loose more that just a dollar. To me I buy only the cds I actually like. And sometimes just 1 or 2 songs are good out of the entire cds so i end up not buying it. And I get my music trough other ways, and the only people that gain anything out of all this is the people that provide the same music for cheaper. "If you know what I mean"
    "Pimps Up Hoez Down"

    And the words in parantasis is copyrighted but people will still use this words because it is natural to take other peoples ideas and make profit out of them. That is what the music industry has been doing.
    christ93 (Member) 26 January 2006 15:16 Send private message to this user   
    I have not bought a CD from a label in a long time. Support the indie bands. All the money from the sale of the record goes to them, not the label.
    Steve83 (Member) 26 January 2006 17:25 Send private message to this user   
    Too bad the MPAA's anti-piracy success didn't happen inside THEIR OWN HEADQUARTERS!

    http://www.afterdawn.com/news/archive/7246.cfm
    afterdood (Newbie) 28 January 2006 10:32 Send private message to this user   
    I dont support someone copying and selling someone elses material but I see nothing wrong with copying and sharing music or movies. The last thing as an artist you want to do is limit your availablity, being famous is about being as popular as possible not limiting yourself through copy protection.These companies are trying to monopolize and controll distribution, overpopulation and too much compitition and poor products not filesharing is largely do to poor sales. aparently Kennedy doesnt realize the american goverment aka the people dont want this and are laregly being bypassed by a corrupt political system.
    I think the lobbying scandal is just the tip of the iceberge, its obvious no american would support arresting a 13 year old child and thier mother for piracy, its funny how american consumers are being bypassed when it comes to asking about what they want
    when it comes to filesharing laws, it makes me realize america is largely owned now by Mgm,Fox, Sony and a few others and Religious groups with enough money to pay off judges wich is what lobbying is all about. How can the do it when all I have to do is destroy the data. You know if they do search and seizure people will just destroy the data and start suing the goverment. In disgust of the movie and music industry I dont think i'll ever again buy another movie or piece of music. Question is do you really want a world so asinine and off base where your kid is given the electric chair for uploading 20,000 songs. Its just music and movies. Its not crack. Its not guns. We dont give hardened criminals who kill and have hard drugs the amount of attention were giving people who copy 5 dvds at 250,000 dollars a pop. OJ didnt pay as much.
    If were that stupid we deserved to nuke ourself out of existence with this anti-orwellist pro fascist consumerism american journalists have decided to adopt. Worse is when I see obvious stories like this wich lead me to realize thier payed advertisements by companies paying off journalists to write pro-anti-piracy comments. America sadly makes me just want to puke anymore as an american.
     Post your comment
     

    Subscribe to our newsfeed

    Get the latest headlines delivered directly to your favourite RSS reader or content aggregation service by using the links below.

    AfterDawn.com: News - RSS feed
    Add to Google
    Add to My Yahoo!
    Add to MyMSN

    Search for headlines

    Search through our news archive.

    Last week's most popular software downloads

    Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums | DVD X Copy Forums
    Music: MP3Lizard.com
    Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums
    Software: Software downloads
    Blogs: User profile pages
    RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
    International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | download.fi | fin.MP3Lizard.com
    Navigate: Search | Site map
    About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
    Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
     
      © 1999-2008 by AfterDawn Ltd.