Is peer-to-peer downloading just digital gluttony?

Posted almost 4 years ago
From Nationalpost.comBy Adam McDowellOn a message board for the group People With An Absurdly Large Music Collection on last.fm, a user with the handle AndretheDark boasts of his hoard of 30,281 songs. It would take him 94 days to listen to each one. With a catalogue of more than 75,000, Pale_Court has him beat. She writes that her music pile takes up 368 gigabytes of space, and counting.In the era of hard drives measured in terabytes, anything less than 10,000 songs is modest. Eric Garland, CEO of BigChampagne, says larger hard drives are pushing the number of illegal downloads worldwide past the 15-billion-song mark, and some are gorging at the trough with insatiable appetites."There's a really significant population who are downloading hundreds of songs a month - more than you could listen to if all you did is listen to them," says Garland, whose online media metrics company was among the first to chart the popularity of illegal downloads. "Are these people who are feeding at the all-you-can eat buffet of free music greedy? The answer, by the numbers, is absolutely. They eat till they make themselves sick. People hoard music that they never even listen to."The music industry is so worried that the Canadian Association of Songwriters has proposed slapping a $5 levy on every Internet subscription, with the money to be distributed to musicians. Even prince of darkness Ozzy Osbourne has complained that sales of his latest album, Black Rain, have been "suffering terribly" because people are helping themselves to left-click discounts.On the face of it, hoarding tens of thousands of digital music files for which one has paid nothing looks like greed, plain and simple. Economists, however, are accustomed to soberly examining human beings' acquistive tendencies while declining to moralize. For analysts of digital downloading trends, the question is often not whether music piracy is wrong: It's whether the greed (or rather, self-interest) of digital packrats can create positive externalities (that is, benefits) for others."We do not use the term ‘greed.' We never try to put that label on it. You want to find out why this phenomenon is happening," says Sudip Bhattacharjee, an associate professor at the University of Connecticut's school of business. "We always try to understand the ‘why' of it. We look at it from an economic perspective."Bhattacharjee has spent much of this decade studying the behaviour and motives of digital pirates and their effect on music sales. His research has indicated that chronic downloaders' collecting is often as much about sharing as it is about owning music for themselves."Almost all college students are on Facebook, and the reason is they want to know about others and let others know about themselves," he says. "Music is a great way of letting other people know about themselves: This is what my taste is, these are my favourite artists."Mega-collections then become music libraries for others. Keiran Reilly's collection of 4,477 songs (about 12½ days' worth) looks puny by comparison to some of the libraries on last.fm, but it's as much as he can possibly store. "The biggest thing that's keeping me from getting more music is that I've run out of space on my computer," says the 29-year-old Torontonian. He has 1½ gigabytes of hard drive space left, "which is barely enough to run the computer." He estimates around 75%-80% of his stockpile was downloaded without paying via a peer-to-peer application called Azureus.Reilly (his name has been changed) is a connoisseur of genres some people have never heard of. His playlists of late have been built around Calle 13, Alexis y Fido and Daddy Yankee - Puerto Rican stars of reggaetón, which he describes as "salsa-infused Latin hip-hop." He's proof of the idea that the larger and more varied one's shared music collection becomes, the more one is doing musicians' marketing for them. You don't even need to be linked to Reilly's collection online to benefit from his collection of reggaetón. You just need to be in his car. "If anything, having a larger library allows me to share more," Reilly says. "With the recent fad of reggaetón in my life, it's funny how many people have been in my car and said, ‘Wow, what is this? Where can I get more of this?"That's totally exposing them to more music. The fact that I have more music available to me and I can easily create a high-quality copy means I'm sharing stuff to other people that they otherwise wouldn't be exposed to at all."Research backs up the idea that free downloading gives breaks to smaller artists. In a 2002 paper titled Stardom, Peer-to-Peer and the Socially Optimal Distribution of Music, M.X. Zhang of the Sloan School of Management at MIT argued that marginal and up-and-coming musicians benefit from the way file sharing disseminates their music from hard drive to hard drive. In a 2003 review of the economics literature about digital piracy for the German economics institute CESifo, researchers Martin Peitz and Patrick Waelbroeck summarized Zhang's findings: With the help of peer-to-peer networks, "marginal artists can gain from the exposure effect ... in an asymmetric world (with stars and niche performers), the current techonology [i.e., CDs] favours the promotion of stars. With digital copies, niche performers can more easily access consumers."As well as the star system, illegal downloading discourages another strategy from the CD era that was designed to maximize record companies' profits by reaching deeper into customers' pockets: the packaging of songs into albums. Economists refer to this kind of sales strategy as "bundling." "For example, we see bundling going on when we see a toothbrush sold with toothpaste," Bhattacharjee says. "What is an album? It is basically a bundle of songs. Some of them are good, some of them are not so good. A lot of consumers have indicated they do not like bundling."Garland recalls that prior to the advent of CDs in the 1980s, the music industry generally divided its sales between singles and LPs. "In the days of vinyl, a song was pretty cheap." Then, he says, "The industry got greedy."In the era of the compact disc, the single all but disappeared. Consumers were forced to spend $15 or more on an album, buying 10 songs they didn't want in order to get the one song they did. The result? "Oh my God, they minted money," Garland says. "The torrential downpour of cash from the late '80s through the middle '90s was unprecedented. If you talk to the executives and the artists who were there during this gold rush and they talk about it like Camelot, as a time when all you had to do was show up in the morning and you got rich."Through interviews and focus group sessions with digital packrats, Bhattacharjee and Garland have both concluded that many people are motivated to download songs for free in retaliation for what they perceive as the greed of the recording industry."One of the drivers in the customers' greed is vengeance. People feel that they were exploited by the music industry for years," Garland says. "People justified downloading music for free by saying, ‘The music industry stole from me and my parents, and now it's our turn.' "Today the big four record companies are back to where they were in the 1970s and prior: Having to sell each song individually, even to the customers willing to pay full price. Sounds like a victory for the listener.The economic arguments in favour of file sharing should not be interpreted to suggest you shouldn't pay. In fact, there's never been a better time to buy music legitimately, and it could be argued that the average, conscientious consumer has greed to thank for it. If not for the popularity of the original, all-free version of Napster around the turn of the century, Garland says, legitimate music download sites - such as iTunes, Canada's Puretracks and the contemporary, for-pay version of Napster - might never have developed in the first place. At the very least, competition from illegal downloading motivates for-pay sites to offer the customer the best deal possible. Fortunately for the recording industry, it is possible to offer a better deal than free. As economists observe, "cost" does not merely refer to money. "Going to an illegal site has its costs," Bhattacharjee says. "The time you spend searching and the time you spend downloading. When you download something illegally there's a very high chance there will be a virus in that, so you are killing your own machine. And the whole idea that you are doing an illegal activity and you may be caught. When you download an illegal file, very often it is not of high quality. These are all things that deter you from going the illegal way." Given the pains of piracy, it's not surprising that more and more consumers are choosing to spend a dollar a song instead. "It is a much more satisfying experience than going to an illegal site," Bhattacharjee says. Techonology may have changed the game, in other words, but the recording industry could still win it. If greed got them into this mess, greed can get them out.But even if the recording industry triumphs in the battle for some hard drives, the consumer has already won the war. Thanks to innovations forced on the industry by illegal downloading, Garland says the 21st-century model would favour the little guy even if everyone started paying for every track tomorrow."As it turns out, iTunes and their ilk are almost as bad for big music as people downloading songs for free. It's devastated the business," he says. Garland has explained to record company executives, " ‘If you guys could obliterate piracy and replace it with people buying songs a buck at a time ... people are spending [a dollar] instead of $18.' You're arguing about the difference between losing 100% of your gross and losing 90%-plus."Either way, the listener wins, and not because anyone is deliberately arranging for it to be so. For it is not from the benevolence of the record company, nor the artist, nor Apple - nor indeed of the digital packrat - that we expect to be able to download a track from iTunes for 99¢ with little or no hassle. It is from their regard to their own self-interest. Adam Smith might have liked the sound of that.Davesonic - Don't everyone thank me all at once. :)

Comments (28)

  1. Cody B says I agree with a whole lot of this..thanks. The rationalization for free downloading (to pay the industry back because they ripped us off) does ring a little hollow. People do it because they can! It is no political statement.. Greed, laziness, and shortsightedness as adjectives for the biz...Perfect!
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  2. brz says Dave- interesting post. it's good to see an actual economic argument about all of this stuff. although, i'm not sure the economists "rational actor" model does a good job of explaining the motiviations of people who have 10,000 plus songs. i think that's something the psychologists would like to weigh in on. "here's another post":http://mog.com/drewfonts/blog_post/153910 that asks some good questions about the albums vs singles question.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  3. davesonic says For sure. The labels opened Pandoras box by putting their music on mp3 and now cry when it's being used against them. There is no going back now so they will have to figure out a way to adapt to a new busines model.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  4. davesonic says The people that are downloading that much music are doing it because they can and it because it looks cool to have a full ipod even though they may not have a clue about some of the music they have on there. The ipod has turned everyone into poseur music geeks. My sister in law has a full ipod but when she listens to it in the car she keeps skipping songs saying "boring,boring,don't know it, ooh Britney"
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  5. davesonic says brz, yeah I saw that post and loved it.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  6. Cody B says Yeah, that is a cool post..I'm diving in with my 2 cents right now. There is something good for me about having a massive library and using the shuffle. 1 no repeats and 2 a lot of new discoveries..I have created all these ways of tagging and sectioning off, new to me stuff. It is definitely a new way of listening, but i still go back to album listening from time to time. The choices can be overwhelming,indeed, and it is nice to have the shuffle as a back up.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  7. davesonic says I really only use my mp3 player on long trips. When I'm at home it's vinyl/Cd's/PC or in the car around town it's Cd's. I find I can get into new music better if it's not being mixed with familar stuff.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  8. brz says dave - "poseur music geeks" - genius. it's a generalization, though, and one must always be careful with those. and i agree completely with what you said about listening... the ipod is really only for long trips, when it would be a pain to have to bring along a bunch of CDs, otherwise it's all CDs, and the occaisonal tape. cody - i'm not saying that the random is evil, just that i've realized it's had a not always positive influence on my listening. partly though, that may be because about 95% of the stuff on my ipod is something i have on CD, and i already know it, so i miss out on the serendipity of stumbling across something "new to me". although, i still get to appreciate when it picks out exactly the right song for the moment. while i was writing this, i was thinking about dave's sister-in-law skipping through a bunch of stuff. it's at least possible, with such a huge collection, she might someday stumble across something she didn't know and wouldn't have otherwise known that she liked...
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  9. Cody B says I'm just saying, for the person, like myself, who gorges down 1000's of tracks a month, the shuffle may be the only way I discover stuff....I also agree on its limitations, so I alternate between album listening and shuffling. I rarely skip tracks, and yeah occaisionally I'll get an Uncle Dave Macon/Method Man mix, but it doesn't bother me. Did the technology change us? Or this this the way we always wanted it? Or is the shuffle a return to what most of us grew up with, listening to the radio?
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  10. davesonic says Good question. I think you're right the mp3 player in general is just another tool we music fans can use, what with the state of terrestrial radio these days. Thank god for WOXY.com.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  11. Cody B says Ok, here's some stats..My current itunes counts started 9/20/2007, when I got a new computer. I put about 50,000 tracks in the HD from my CD collection and I've added another 20,000 since then..My last.fm sez I've played 38,000 songs..My itunes sez I've listened to 13,000 or so unique songs (15 is my highest play count for any one song) since 9/20 (this includes my wifes ipod,I don't have one)..I also play Cd's in the house and car that aren't tracked. Looks like I have 58,000 songs to listen to hit 'em all. Of course some of these, like Motown Box Sets, I listened to on the stereo, but it is altogether possible, I have at least 50,000 suprises in my future..
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  12. davesonic says You have too much time on your hands. :)
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  13. Cody B says I'll tell you Dave, it is really weird to be in school again at 40+ years old, but I never forgot how to procrastinate!
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  14. davesonic says Ha, I'll keep that in mind when I head back to school this fall
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  15. msquared64 says great post Dave. I would have to say that I am in a similar boat as Cody, as I do download (strictly from blogs that I have come to expect quality from) quite a bit, but I do it in spurts. Usually I sit down in my free time and on one day or two every few months I'll go through the posts on the blogs I like and pull the music that seems interesting. I usually then make a playlist of all the newest songs I've got and listen to it on shuffle and weed out the good from the bad, usually deleting the stuff I really don't like and would never care to listen to again. Quite frequently though, I find artists that I would have never found before and go out and buy their full album. My most recent example of this was The Dodos "Visiter," which has been on repeat ever since. But for every "Visiter" I get 3 or 4 duds that I discard. So I guess I'm binging & purging at the buffet of free music!
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  16. davesonic says But at least you buy stuff as well. Not to generalize, but a lot of ipod owners couldn't even tell you where the nearest Record store is.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  17. msquared64 says I agree... personally, I hate buying albums on iTunes. When the rage first started, I will admit I bought a few albums and songs here and there, but then I found myself missing the actual physical materials that came with an album so I avoid iTunes when I can now, though I do give them credit for that "Just For You" feature that recommends albums based on your catalogue, it's pretty accurate, though occassionally it just makes no sense whatsoever. ... and I'm sad to admit that I had been walking 3 miles to what I thought was the nearest Newbury Comics (mainly Massachusetts-based record store) for months now, until I had a classic "D'oh!" moment and realized there was one 2 buildings away from my work...
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  18. davesonic says I'm sure they all appreciate the business
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  19. Lester Jonze says Ok, I guess I'm a Cpdy wanna be with my Itunes here. The last time I added new music was yesterday with the new Raconteurs. So I have currently 25473 tracks, 81 days worth, 178 G which I have mostly sitting on a 1.5T external drive which I bought with the sole intent of a musical library. I reset all my play counts once a year, while trying to have all songs with at least one play by the end of the current year play cycle. So far my last fm says I have listened to 7077 tracks or so, maybe thirty five percent or so for an average of 77 tracks per day. This is since Jan 4. Now Cody must just do nothing but play music all day as he averages 144 tracks per day according to his lastfm. What I wanna know is how in the hell does one person listen to that much music in one day. I've been thinking about this for a while now. Dude, how do you do it? And then as far as the whole gluttony as digital morality thing, I say hell yes and glad of it. Since November I have added roughly 400 or so cd's from various generous digital sources and am actively searching for more. I say if it's out there, grab it, because at some point I think the landscape will change to where illegal downloading will not be nearly as easy as it is now.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  20. Cody B says My last.fm stats are from July of '07, so I'm not that busy..I did work at home and I do go to school online, so I'm always here with the damn box on..
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  21. Lester Jonze says Yikes, either way, that's a lot of damn music, I mean alot. Hats off to you.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  22. runobodyii says Great post and conversation you've got going here, davesonic. I don't know, having too many books to read or too many cds / digital files too really listen to kinda bothers me, so periodically I go through my stuff and cull, then sell or trade or give away what seems unnecessary, a ritual I've been performing for maybe twenty years. There's also the question of what one means by "listening" to music. A year ago I visited my teenaged niece during her spring break. She was at that unbearable age, so most days she had her ipod and I had my ipod and it was a pretty sorry affair. But a funny thing was that she looked askance at the fact that when I "listened" to music I didn't do anything else, just sat there and listened. While for her "listening" to music was always an accompaniment to some other activity even (a surprise to me) reading. If I am doing very light reading which is kinda rare for me I can "listen" to jazz or classical in the background, but lyrics would distract me even then, and when I'm really reading I don't want any other music than the music of the words in my head. When I'm just fooling around on the computer, surfing, MOGging, what-have-you, I'm listening to music, but otherwise it's a singe-task, full concentration affair, so listening to music takes up a lot of time at the expense of other life activities. Mostly I view free legal downloads as a means to discovery new music (I don't pirate) and I only shuffle in discovery mode, so to speak, remaining an album / artist listener. If I wanted randomness I'd turn on our funky non-commercial station (and get concert updates, etc in the bargain). I had been worrying the problem of digital vs. physical music, but I think I've solved it instinctively. I'm really keen on exploring blues more and roots music in general (love the Folkways label) and although those things are available on emusic where I subscribe, I've just ordered maybe a dozen cds cause I want to sit and listen and read the liner notes and lie on the couch and lie in bed and live with these cds and see them arranged on a shelf. So how will I spend my 50 monthly downloads on music that is now, that I am content to listen to without knowing all that much about it.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  23. davesonic says You're a better man than I. Myself I can't bear to get rid of music, or books for that matter. Although I did just go through our cassette collection and weeded out the stuff I found embarrising(My wife was into Rick Astley when she was young...no really it was my wife) I agree with you as well on the reading,if I want to absorb what I'm reading, it has to be dead silence.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  24. runobodyii says I read "embarrassing" and "Rick" and immediately supplied "Springfield," my own youthful embarrassment. My mother can't get rid of anything; clutter makes me nervous like it's a picture of the mind.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  25. Cody B says I cull a lot..but only to trade for more stuff. It's much easier to cull these days with the digital copy staying behind, but the market for used cd's is so glutted you don't get as much for 'em anymore. I love libraries and stacks of vinyl, but it is better if they are in order. Run-I agree about being able to listen in solitude while doing nothing else, but with the six year old and school, I just don't have enough time..My car though, is the refuge..plenty of music listened to in there.
    Permalink posted 04/04/2008
  26. dharmachris says That is thought provoking stuff. I kinda agree that some is revenge, having bought my share of lame CDs and albums over the years, but I think the biggest reason people download is the ease and price. If folks can sit in their rooms and instantly obtain some music for free, they will do so. This is all about "the long tail", selling one or two items instead of mass amounts of single products. Good for the smaller scale artists it would seem.
    Permalink posted 04/08/2008
  27. davesonic says Right, so on another topic, why not slap a $5 tax on my internet bill? The people that say they don't download so why should they pay, may start to download music when they see how easy it is and it's only costing them $5.
    Permalink posted 04/09/2008
  28. Sturgell says yeah, we've talk before about how trent reznor is a big proponent of this thing. I don't know... still seems like extortion to me
    Permalink posted 04/26/2008

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