p2p
Is There a Middle Ground?
Filed in archive Analysis by Marc on November 28, 2005

Excerpt from "Who Are The Pirates" in Online Spin by Shelly Palmer





We hear the content industry and rights holders complaining about piracy everyday: file sharing, physical piracy, theft-of-services, derivative works, etc. But has anyone stopped to think about how many times consumers are asked to pay for the same content?



Computer files may be the final form factor, but that is not stopping media companies from extracting every last bit of value from each file.



For example: first you pay 99ยข to purchase a song on iTunes. Then you pay $2.49 to download a portion of that song as a ringtone. You can then pay $1.99 to use a portion of that song as a ringback tone - and $1.99 on iTunes to purchase a download of the video for that song.



Next comes a charge of $1.49 - for a still image of the artist to use as wallpaper on your mobile device. You would rather download it for free from the Internet, but you can't get it into your phone.



You may pay $14.99 for the DVD of the movie that features that song and, if you are truly out of your mind, you will pay $19.99 for the CD of the album that includes that song.



Then you will pay $3.95 to watch the pay-per-view or video-on-demand version of the movie - and another $6.95 for the HD VOD concert that features the same song.



If the media company has its way, you will pay $12.95 per month for the subscription to HBO that will broadcast the movie and the concert. Ultimately, part of your basic cable package will go to pay a per-subscriber fee for you to hear the song.



You may also pay $12.95 per month to a satellite radio company where you can hear the song and, if Apple continues its world dominance over the personal music player world, you will ultimately purchase a co-branded iPod with the complete collected works of this artist (including this same song) for about $200.



How many times can you sell the same master file? There doesn't seem to be any limit. You just have to keep the walls in the walled gardens up and keep the formats incompatible.



How many times will you buy the same master file? That question is being answered every day on P2P networks, via e-mail and podcasts.



Obviously, some consumers are willing to pay for the convenience of not having to bother converting their own files to be used in all of their devices.



But there are far more consumers who would rather not pay for the same thing over and over again. Is there a middle ground?




Marc Freedman
RazorPop, developer of TrustyFiles, the leading multiple network file sharing software with search and download of ALL top networks.
Are you a major entertainment company, other content provider, distributor, marketer, advertiser, or other organization seeking to reach the huge 80 million P2P user market? Then you need BrandedP2P.



Permalink: Is There a Middle Ground?
Tags: pirate  music 
Trackback: http://publish.creative-weblogging.com/publish/mt-tb.pl/11553
img Addthis img Ask img Blinklist img del.icio.us img Digg img Fark img Facebook img Google img Lycos img Ma.gnolia Add this page to Mister Wong Mr Wong img Netscape img Netvousz img Newsvine img Reddit img StumbleUpon img Slashdot img Tailrank img Technorati img Wink img Yahoo

Vote for Is There a Middle Ground?:

  • Currently 8.00/10
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • 7
  • 8
  • 9
  • 10
Rating: 8.00 out of 2 vote(s) cast.
 
Subscribe
Share It
RSSrss
See all blog subscribe options
Google google
What is RSS?
Yahoo! yahoo
Addthis Subscribe using any feed reader!
Bloglines Bloglines
Newsletter

TwitterFollow us on Twitter!