Amassive public policy studyhas revealed that on average file - partaker buy 30 percentage more euphony than their non - sharing counterparts . That suggests that the record label ’ self - declared enemies are in fact their best customers .
The subject field , known as the Copy Culture Survey , was carried out by the non - partisan American Assembly , and the results were tease yesterday . It ’s free-base on thousands of in - depth phone interviews across the US , and it ’s probably one of the most thorough reviews of media sharing habit to be undertaken .
The results , which seem to fly in the face of assumed platter label wisdom , show that file - partaker buy 30 percent more euphony than their non - sharing counterparts . Interestingly , it also points out that offline copying is far more prevalent than online music plagiarisation .

However , it ’s also worth pointing out that self - confessed P2P filing cabinet sharers reported take big music collections . So , it might not be all too surprising that euphony lover , with crowing music collections , also buy more music : a taste for media consumption encourages both single file sharing and purchasing .
That , along with the news that offline plagiarisation is a bigger concern , is something the criminal record recording label need to wrestle with . [ American AssemblyviaTorrent Freak ]
Music

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