The policy of the
Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) to sue users caught downloading music
illegally has done nothing to slow the trade of copyrighted music on
peer-to-peer networks, according to the
Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF).
"The lawsuit campaign has enriched only lawyers, rather than compensating
artists for file sharing," the EFF declared in a
25-page
report (PDF). "One thing has become clear: suing music fans is no answer to
the peer-to-peer dilemma."
The EFF claims that traffic on peer-to-peer file-sharing services has
ballooned since the RIAA began suing individual users, from 3.3 million monthly
users in August 2003 to more than 8.8 million by June 2005.
The recording industry trade group is also singling out a small group of
copyright violators and saddling them with unnecessarily steep financial
penalties, the EFF lamented.
"There is no question that the RIAA's lawsuit campaign is unfairly singling
out a few people for a disproportionate amount of punishment," reads the report.
"Tens of millions of Americans continue to use peer-to-peer file sharing
software and other new technologies to share music, yet the RIAA has randomly
singled out only a few for retribution through lawsuits."
Instead of pursuing action against individual users, the EFF recommended that
the RIAA and its members should adopt policies to bring customers back to
purchasing music.
Lowering music prices and abandoning digital rights management technology
would provide a far better incentive for users to purchase legitimate copies of
music, the group suggested.
"If the recording industry is serious about luring music fans away from
peer-to-peer networks and other methods of sharing, it should focus on dangling
a tastier carrot, rather than swatting more individuals with the lawsuit stick,
" said the report.
The RIAA declined to comment specifically on the EFF report, but denied that
its legal campaign has failed to yield any results.
The group contends that, while peer-to-peer sharing has increased, the
popularity of paid download services has grown significantly in recent years.
Consumers also have a better understanding of the difference between legal and
illegal services.
Comments
Have your say on this article