The Music Industry’s New Internet

Streaming music sites with freely accessible content are being used by a growing number of listeners as a substitute for buying music

Streaming music sites with freely accessible content are being used by a growing number of listeners as a substitute for buying musicFive years ago, New York-based graphic designer Gitamba Saila-Ngita spent around $100 a month buying CDs and digital downloads to fill his iPod. Now, he spends less than $10 each month on tunes. The reason? He gets almost all of his music from services like Imeem and Last.fm where he can listen to pretty much anything over the Web for free or at minimal cost. “And I absolutely listen to more music than I used to,” says the 23-year-old. “I pretty much have music playing all the time. It’s because I can access so much of it, however I want.”The music industry has a new Internet problem. A decade ago, the major record labels began to worry about online piracy, in which people illegally swapped music over peer-to-peer networks like Napster and later LimeWire. Partly in response to the piracy threat and partly due to sliding CD sales, music companies began to experiment with licensing their records to new online services.
http://www.businessweek.com/technology/content/mar2009/tc2009035_000194.htm

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