PDA

View Full Version : How 136 People Became 7 Million Illegal File-Sharers



wraggster
September 5th, 2009, 10:17
The British government's official figures on the level of illegal file sharing in the UK come from questionable research commissioned by the music industry. The Radio 4 show named 'More or Less' examined the government's claim that 7m people in Britain are engaged in illegal file sharing. The 7m figure actually came from a report written about music industry losses for Forrester subsidiary Jupiter Research. The report was privately commissioned by none other than the UK's music trade body, the BPI. The 7m figure had been rounded up from an actual figure of 6.7m, gleaned from a 2008 survey of 1,176 net-connected households, 11.6% of which admitted to having used file-sharing software — in other words, only 136 people. That 11.6% was adjusted upwards to 16.3% 'to reflect the assumption that fewer people admit to file sharing than actually do it.' The 6.7m figure was then calculated based on an estimated number of internet users that disagreed with the government's own estimate. The wholly unsubstantiated 7m figure was then released as an official statistic.

http://tech.slashdot.org/story/09/09/04/2148203/How-136-People-Became-7-Million-Illegal-File-Sharers

Darksaviour69
September 5th, 2009, 10:32
lolz

wraggster
September 5th, 2009, 10:37
i think if the truth is known about 98% of the Internet population have some illegal software etc on their PCs

VampDude
September 5th, 2009, 14:16
I've never shared, although I didn't pay for my video editing software... There are less sharers than the actual downloaders, if they were to crack down on the downloads and make it a prisonable offence they would have no room for the real criminals. :p