The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) policy of suing users caught downloading music illegally has done nothing to slow the trade of copyrighted music on peer-to-peer (P2P) networks, according to the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).
"The lawsuit campaign has enriched only lawyers, rather than compensating artists for file sharing," the EFF declared in a 25-page report.
"One thing has become clear: suing music fans is no answer to the P2P dilemma."
The EFF claims that since the RIAA began suing individual users, traffic on P2P file-sharing services has ballooned from 3.3m monthly users in August of 2003 to more than 8.8m by June of 2005.
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"The lawsuit campaign has enriched only lawyers, rather than compensating artists for file sharing," the EFF declared in a 25-page report.
"One thing has become clear: suing music fans is no answer to the P2P dilemma."
The EFF claims that since the RIAA began suing individual users, traffic on P2P file-sharing services has ballooned from 3.3m monthly users in August of 2003 to more than 8.8m by June of 2005.
















Weird... I could have sworn I've heard this all over the Internet for the past ... how long?
It's good to know there are plenty of people out there with a strong grasp of the obvious.
I could buy online but its not that quick since I grew up getting to listen to my stuff when I got home kinda thing. I'm not crazy about downloading music since I do not have the original CD and am stuck then with however the place decided to encode even if it isn't loaded with DRM.
The RIAA hasn't learned that if you treat everyone like thieves we might as well be thieves. They have never been pro-consumer, and say they are doing it for the artists but that is obviously not the case either. They need to be replaced, but like that is ever going to happen.
+1
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