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Are lawsuits intimidating students?

File trading is down but so are CD sales
By Ann Harrison , Network World , 09/25/2003
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PUBLISHER'S NOTE: Please note that, as of 9/29/03, all of your valued Network World Fusion newsletters will be delivered to you from nwfnews.com. If you use filters to manage your newsletters based on domain name, please adjust accordingly.

According to a study released this month by the Business Software Alliance, almost two-thirds of college students surveyed said they would still download copyright software if given the opportunity. 

The study, called "Internet Piracy on Campus," surveyed 1,000 students and 300 faculty members. The report blames university educators and claims that 40% of educators believe it's OK to share or exchange software to cut costs. I remember swapping a lot of used expensive textbooks during my college days.

According to the study, of the 69% of students who have downloaded music, only 8% paid for it. Almost one-quarter of the respondents say they have downloaded movies, but only 4% paid for those. A full 93% of students polled did endorse intellectual property rights.

"Students aren't being told, 'Downloading unlicensed or illegal files is a mistake,'" BSA CEO Robert Holleyman said in a statement. "With P2P use on the rise, student and educator attitudes toward illegal downloading and file swapping, if ignored, have the potential to become a gateway for increased software piracy on thousands of college campuses."

The BSA study is contrasted nicely by another study published by AT&T Labs which shows that the main source of unauthorized copies of new movies on file sharing networks seems to be not consumers, or students, but entertainment industry insiders.

According to the study, nearly 300 copies of popular movies found by the researchers on P2P networks "appeared to have been leaked by industry insiders" before the consumer DVD release date. If you know anyone in the entertainment industry, this makes perfect sense. Industry insiders pride themselves on never paying full freight for newly released material and if they do, it's a sign that they lack sufficient mojo.

Ken Jacobsen, senior vice president and director of worldwide piracy issues for the Motion Picture Association admitted to the "New York Times" that industry insiders do distribute copyrighted works. "The industry experience is the awards screeners are a source for piracy," Jacobsen told the Times, "but primarily during the Oscar judging season."

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