Is Illegal Downloading Ruining the Music/Film Industries?
Get the full story updates
-
Is Illegal Downloading Ruining the Music/Film Industries?
-
The Supreme Court of Canada made a landmark decision to scrap fees for music download services in Canada.
Supreme Court strikes down copyright fees on music, video game downloads
-
Following years of doom and gloom surrounding the rise of internet piracy and the death of physical formats, we’re finally hearing some good news from the UK music industry.
The future of digital music distribution and online music marketing
-
Musicians say the latest music streaming service, launched by Telstra, will help the industry suffer less from illegal downloading.
Telstra music service to help stop pirating
-
French Supreme Court bans pirate lingo from searches
Google ordered to censor 'torrent', 'megaupload' and more words.
-
A survey of British music fans found that 40 percent couldn’t remember the last time they had bought a physical media .
When did you last buy a CD? UK music fans can’t remember.
-
A revision to Japan's copyright law to impose criminal penalties on those who illegally download music and movies has sparked debate in the country.
Jail time, fines for illegal downloads debated in Japan
-
Will The Cloud Save The Music Industry? The music industry has taken a bit of a pounding in recent years. Illegal downloading brought a once vibrant industry
Will The Cloud Save The Music Industry? | CloudTweaks.com - Cloud Computing Community
-
Brick-and-mortar retailers will need to keep evolving to battle the increasing presence of digital stores.
The HMVs vs the iTunes
-
People who are wrongly accused of making illegal downloads will have to pay a £20 fee to appeal and prove their innocence in a move that has angered consumer groups.
Guilty until proven innocent
-
A bill aimed at penalizing Internet users for downloading pirated music and video files passed the Diet on Wednesday
Music industry wins a battle as antidownloading bill gets some teeth
-
Hundreds of thousands more Australians have turned to illegal download sites in the past year to save money on movies, music, software and TV shows during the economic downturn, new figures show.
Illegal downloads soar as hard times bite
-
New illegal download tools are being tested to beat movie and music police.
Download pirates to launch new weapon
-
Hollywood loses final appeal in piracy case
Hollywood loses final appeal in piracy case
-
Telstra launches streaming music service
Telstra launches streaming music service
-
It's a ritual as old as VHS. On an uneventful night, you head down to the local video store, rummage through the shelves for a movie to rent or beckon the clerk for a worthy recommendation.
Has downloading killed the video star?
-
The music industry has been throwing fits about illegal downloads for years. Probably longer than you realize.
Vanishing middle class threatens the music industry
-
CLARE Bowditch has just made a playlist for her mum. It features tracks from the catalogue of works by Debussy and Russian composer Dmitry Bortniansky.
Streams of gold may be music industry's saviour
-
Theoretically, I agree with Lowery's main points -- that the industry is not the evil warlock it's made out to be and that artists rely on compensation for their efforts...
Illegal Downloading Is Wrong, But I Do It Anyway
-
Right now, four out of five digital music downloads are illegal
The High Price of Free Music: How Illegal Downloads Are Silencing Artists - DailyFinance
-
-
Is Illegal Downloading Ruining the Music/Film Industries?
Get the full updates from this story
Top sharers
Next story
Close