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Illegal Downloads Still Preferred By Some Radiohead Listeners

By David Kaplan - Tue 16 Oct 2007 09:50 PM PST

Despite letting music fans name their own price for its latest album, Radiohead is finding that some still like downloading their songs illegally, according to Forbes. On the same day that Radiohead’s In Rainbows became available, about 240,000 users downloaded the album from illicit P2P BitTorrent sites, Forbes said, citing Big Champagne, a LA-based tracker of online copyright violators. After that the album was downloaded roughly 100,000 more times daily, totaling 500,000 unauthorised downloads. And while that’s still less than the 1.2 million authorised album downloads tallied by Gigwise.com, Big Champaign expects the illegals to outpace legals. So far, the average price users are paying for In Rainbows on Radiohead’s site has been in the $5 (£2.46) to $8 (£3.94) range, according to Wired

Posted in: Entertainment, Music



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2 Responses:
  • From Vlad Stesin Wed 17 Oct 2007 08:00 AM

    Keep in mind that the site was unavailable or extremely slow the day of the launch. This alone can account for a very large proportion of illegal downloads, since fans were desperately trying to get their hands on the album but were simply unable do it legally.

  • From dave Sun 06 Jan 2008 07:13 AM

    I believe this is a great thing.. however i also think Radiohead made so much money from it because of who they are (previous marketing over 10 years) and that they were the first big group to do it and it received a lot of free publicity which drove people to their site and thus the download. I fear that if this became common practice for artists that they may not benefit in the same way.....?

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