Does the study conveniently ignore the loss of revenue in the firsr place, is that statistic investigated. That whole idea seems suspect to me as given, at any rate. I wonder if the idea of the study was to justify piracy. What studies? Who made them?mkdr wrote: There have been studies that showed piratism has actually boosted music industries sales. Not from the people who are scared back to legal music sales, but by the ones that download the pirated stuff. This phenomenon is already taken into use by such software companies as Microsoft and Autodesk, who offer their products for free to students. Would there be any chance of music industry doing something similar for students? This would seem like a big cut of their profits on paper, but seriously, how many students you think is going to buy the 1000$ sample-library, rather than pirate it from the net for free.
This argument supposes that there are no other legal ways to better oneself at music. Funny that, I began to better myself at music some thirty-odd years before I had 'a DAW'. Pretty sure I was doing it legally.mkdr wrote:If students were offered a legal way to better themselves at music, they'd surely take it. And this would boost the industries sales on the long run...
This kind of argument smacks of entitlement and seems kind of childish really.



