Monday, 7 October 2013

No, piracy does not kill content creation


Majors, assigns, studios, etc.. often hammered in recent years that the hacking of the new content was cancer of society. Leaves to illustrate their views through stupid videos . False, meets the London School of Economics.
And the latter has not failed to detail his thesis through an ultra complete study , and a graph that pretty much sums up the situation . If since 1998, music sales fell recording, it is none the less the revenue earned through concerts, Internet, smartphones, and the edition itself, enabled the sector to climb income.
The London School of Economics is also explained by:
"Contrary to what the industry says, the music industry is not terminally ill, on the contrary, it is good, and displays excellent income. Revenues from digital sales, subscriptions to specialized services, streaming concerts, which offset the decline in revenues from sales of CDs or albums. "
Besides that, if the Motion Picture Association of America (the famous MPAA) asserts that Internet piracy is devastating film industry, you should know that Hollywood has recently earned record revenue of $ 35 billion in 2012 , an increase of 6% compared to 2011. And if the music industry is stagnating, it is by no means ready to give his last breath, far from it.

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