Teen Music Piracy: Innocent or Guilty

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Teen Music Piracy: Innocent or Guilty

Throughout time, people have resorted to stealing in order to obtain items instead of buying them. It became a problem so consequences were made. Even dating back to the Ten Commandments there were laws against stealing. Recently, theft has become a problem over the internet. Musicians and music companies have lost millions in revenue. Websites such as Napster, The Pirate Bay, and Pandora have made it extremely easy for people, specifically teens, to illegally download and or listen to music for free. Pirating music has become a problem especially because “91 percent of all new music was downloaded illegally over the Internet instead of purchased,” says Logan Lynn from Huffington Post (Lynn). Many, such as the RIAA claim that music piracy is “an ongoing and evolving challenge,” (Who) while others suggest that it is “keeping the music industry alive,” (Issacson).

While many suggest that music piracy is destroying the music industry, others claim that it is actually helping. On average, people who pirate music “legitimately purchase 30 percent more music than non-P2P (Peer to peer) users.” This is what Betsy Issacson claims (Issacson). Most of this music is copied from friends and families that bought it from a music store. In 18-29 year olds, this is where they get about 30% of their music from.

Band and music artists get a lot of their revenue from means other than CD sales. Concerts are one of these methods. They are full of t-shirts, posters, and other merchandise. The Rolling Stones magazines website claims that a single concert can pay as much as “$225,000 per show.” With an average price of $0.99 a song, that would be the equivalent of 227,272 songs being bought (Knopper). Torrent...

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...19 June 2009: n. pag. Print.

Knopper, Steve. "Nine Ways Musicians Actually Make Money Today | Rolling Stone." Rolling Stone. N.p., n.d. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.

Lynn, Logan. “Guess What? Stealing Is Still Wrong.” Huffington Post: n. pag. Huffington Post. Web. 11 Mar. 2014.

Miller, Michael. "Downloading Pirated Music: Pros and Cons." Que: Computing & Technology Books, Video, Articles for Home & Business. Que Publishing, n.d. Web. 20 Mar. 2014.

Skinner, Carrie-Ann. "Teens Just Won't Pay for Music." TechHive. N.p., n.d. Web. 18 Mar. 2014.

"What the Artists and Songwriters Have to Say." MusicUnited.org. Music United, n.d. Web. 19 Mar. 2014.

"Who Music Theft Hurts." Http://www.riaa.com. N.p., n.d. Web. 17 Mar. 2014.

Witherbee, Amy, and Marlanda English. “Music Piracy Costs Billions.” Points of View Reference Senter. N.p., n.d. Web. 13 Mar. 2014.

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