Could All Help With Signing My Petition
Seasonal2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by TEAK36. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.t is a case of quantity here really, as the mother being prosecuted has allowed 1400 tracks to be downloaded illegally and that in the eyes of a music business is far to much revenue lost as compared to someone that has downloaded maybe 20 or 30 a year and isnt worth the persuing through the courts. remember that over the 2 years of downloading this girl was effectivly stealing 2 songs per day every day for the whole 2 years and at a loss of approx 79p-99p per track she was ripping of the music company by �1.50 - �2 every day. and what is worrying more to the companies than that is not just she was stealing them but also that there is a high chance that she was distributing them to friends or family and possibly a far wider group of people either for free or for a profit. This is just too much to go unhalted!
For example, she was downloading 2 a day, if she was then sending directly to, and indirectly through her friends copies of them 2 tracks a day too? if she and 9 of her friends had a copy of the 2 tracks then there are 10 less copies sold and profitted on per track for the companies thus losing them and the retailers 10 copies per track at 99pence a track =approx �10 for one track downloaded and she was doing 2 a day =�20 a day in sales on a daily basis for 2 years = �14,600 of track sales lost due to this one girls downloading.
And remember that they didnt know that the person downloading this quantity at the time of prosecution being brought about was a 14 year old girl, she could have been a older person selling the top selling 1400 tracks of the last 2 years at a car boot sale and selling 1000's of them at a profit.
bit different to someone downloading a couple of songs a month