IFPI Digital Music Report 2005: facts and figures
The Growing Legitimate Digital Music Market
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Legal music sites have quadrupled to over 230 in 2004
- up from 50 a year earlier
- Over 150 services available in 20 countries in Europe
- Over 30 services in the UK, more than 20 in Germany and 10 in France
- Available repertoire has doubled over 12 months to 1 million tracks from January 2004 to January 2005
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Paid-for downloads up tenfold in 2004 to over 200 million
- from 20 million up to 140 million in the US (Nielson Soundscan)
- from zero to nearly 6 million in the UK (UK Official Chart Co, BPI)
- up dramatically in Germany with nearly one million from Musicload in December (Musicload)
- The digital music market was worth US$330 million in 2004 - up on 2003 and set to double in 2005 (Jupiter research). This
represents about 1.5% of record company revenues
- Some third analysts and record companies predict digital sales could reach 25% of revenues in five years
- It is estimated that 50 million portable players were sold in 2004 (IDC), of which 10 million were iPods (Apple)
File-sharing trends
- Infringing music files on the Internet overall (peer-to-peer and other) are down to 870 million in January 2005
from 900 million in January 2004
- Infringing music files solely on P2P networks worldwide is an estimated 760 million, down from January 2004's 800
million and sharply down on April 2003's one billion
- A drop of 900,000 users on the most popular peer-to-peer service (FastTrack, which includes KaZaA) since January 2004,
from 3.2 million to 2.3 million
- Use of services other than KaZaA is increasing - but not necessarily of music files. Music files represent a smaller proportion;
eg. an estimated 25% of files on eDonkey are music, compared to an estimated 75% on Kazaa
- 75% of all distribution of illegal music files on P2P networks is accounted for by 15% of individuals (NPD)
Consumer awareness
- 7 out of 10 people in Europe are aware that file-sharing without permission of copyright holders is illegal
- More people are buying music online legitimately. The same number of music downloaders say they download from a legal source as
from a P2P service (44% each)
- More people intend to buy music online legitimately. Almost one third (31%) of music downloaders say they are likely to download
from a legal service (compared to 22% now) and 55% say they will download from a legal source, including eg artist website (compared to 44%
now)
- Awareness of legal online music services has risen. 49% of 16-29 year olds Dec 2004 are aware of legal ways to buy music online,
up from 38% in December 2003 (GfK)
Legal action
- More than 7,000 cases have been brought against bulk uploaders in Austria, Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy and the UK
and the US to date
- There will be many more legal actions in more countries in 2005
- In 2004 the music industry's anti-piracy activities secured the take-down of 60,900 pirate sites, 477 unauthorised P2P servers
and 1.6 billion infringing music files in 102 countries
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