Comments on: Taste for illegal tunes strong for Europe's youth
Illegal downloads are still beating legal online music on the continent, analysts say.
Illegal downloads are still beating legal online music on the continent, analysts say.
December 2, 2009 7:21 AM PST
December 2, 2009 6:46 AM PST
December 2, 2009 6:15 AM PST
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15 songs and nothing else but an inexpressive jewel case and a
booklet.
As long as the industry keep over pricing their products making
virtually inavaiable for consumers to have it, people will find a
way to get those products.
Over pricing should be considered illegal and not only Kazza, e-
Mule and others...
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http://www.Remove-All-Spyware.com/
http://work-out.blogspot.com/
- Legal sites offer little....
- by November 29, 2005 10:38 AM PST
- the problem with all the legal sites is that it's soo seperated. I cannot buy songs from an online legal store in say Japan, or Belgium. I am stuck only buying from the US online store. Where as p2p's i can browse the music libraries from another user say in South Africa and stumble across music that peaks my interest perhaps enough that i'll search out how to purchase a legal copy. I would have no problem paying the exchange rate to get a song from another country, but the online stores do not allow it.
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- Legal sites offer too much...
- by skeptik November 30, 2005 2:20 PM PST
- The legal sites offer too much control over my music. They want to control what I buy (selection) when I listen to it (limited life media) where I listen to it (limited device support) and how I share it (since when is the mix-tape anything but an excellent grass-roots promotion tool?)
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