One Out Of Four Americans Have Downloaded Mp3's, Says New Study
By Jon Newton, p2pnet.net [02-14-2002]
Music Industry News - as it happens
Source: Mi2N - February 10, 2002Fifty million people, or almost one-quarter (23%) of the American population aged 12 and over, have downloaded a music or mp3 file from of the Net, say findings from a new study examining the influence and effects of online music distribution around the world. By comparison, Napster claimed to have around 40 million users in its heyday, says research firm Ipsos-Reid which conducted the study last November and December. Similar proportions of Americans report having listened to Internet radio (27%) and streamed audio (21%), and over one-third (37%) indicate they have listened to a pre-recorded music CD that was playing in the CD-ROM drive of their PC, Ipsos-Reid found in Tempo: Keeping Pace with Online Music Distribution.
The firm went on that young Americans continue to lead this Internet music phenomenon, as approximately two-fifths of 12-24-year-olds have downloaded music or MP3 files off of the Internet (44% of 12-17 year-olds, and 42% in the 18-24 age group).
Among adults aged 25-34, one-third (35%) have also downloaded music, demonstrating that older age groups are beginning to dabble in the new digital music arena as well. Not only are these individuals trying out music downloading capabilities, they are returning for more, says Ipsos-Reid. Three-fifths of (59%) of Americans who have downloaded a music or MP3 file in the past indicated that they are somewhat, very, or extremely likely to download again in the next 30 days.
In addition, the research shows that females are rapidly increasing their presence in the online music community and have narrowed the long-standing Internet gender gap. This is especially evident among teenage females, aged 12-17, as nearly half (48%) report that they have downloaded music online.
"For many, music is becoming more and more of a PC-centric activity", said Matt Kleinschmit, senior research manager for Ipsos-Reid in Minneapolis and the study's author. "While various issues continue to limit widespread legitimate online music distribution, we can see that Americans are downloading music, listening to Internet radio and streamed song clips, and playing pre-recorded CDs all from the same appliance. In a way, the PC has become a personal jukebox for many downloaders, an almost unlimited and constantly changing source of music, new and old. If legal developments allow more Americans to appreciate the ease and convenience of digital music, this trend will likely accelerate, possibly in ways not yet foreseen."
Source: http://www.musicdish.com/mag/?id=5281
Copyright © 1997-2010 MusicDish LLC., all rights reserved.
About MusicDish e-Journal | Contact Us | Advertise | RSS | Internships