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78% of those who download music online don''t think they are stealing
9/29/2000 |
Release
Washington, D.C. (Thursday, September 28) - The vast majority of those who use the Internet to download music files to their computers do not believe they are stealing. Most couldn''t care less whether the music they have grabbed is copyright protected, a new survey by the Pew Internet & American Life Project has found.
Fully 78% of those who download music don''t think it is stealing to save music files to their computer hard drives and 61% of downloaders say they do not care if the music they capture is copyright protected. In the general population, those under age 30, those in households earning more than $75,000, and those with college degrees are the most likely to back the idea that downloading music isn''t a crime.
The results come just before attorneys for Napster and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) are scheduled on Monday to argue in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals whether Napster''s popular file-swapping system should be enjoined from operating. The industry association, which represents most major record companies, has argued that Napster''s system violates copyright law by allowing users to share music files with each other without paying for them.
The survey also found that the broader universe of Internet users also supports the idea that downloading music is not an act of theft. Fifty-three percent of all Internet users say downloading is not stealing, while 31% say it is stealing. And the general American public, Internet users and nonusers alike, also agree that downloading music is not stealing, though the margin is just 40%-35%. Many of those who don''t have Internet access said in the survey that they had no views on the issue.
"Those who share music with other Internet users think they are doing the high-tech equivalent of swapping cassette tapes with their friends," says Lee Rainie, director of the Pew Internet & American Life Project. "They don''t agree with record companies and music artists who contend that Napster users are doing the same thing as walking into a record store and swiping a CD."
These findings are based on the results of a phone survey of 2,109 adult Americans between July 24 and August 20. Some 1,101 of the respondents are Internet users, and 238 of them have downloaded music files. In the overall survey, the margin of error is plus or minus three percentage points. In the portion dealing with music downloaders, the margin of error is plus or minus 7 percentage points.
Here are some of the other highlights of the survey:
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