'Parasite' music fans download over one billion tracks illegally
Music fans illegally downloaded more than one billion tracks this year, according to new figures.
A report published by industry body the BPI found 7.7 million people in the UK illegally downloaded music worth almost 1 billion. BPI chief executive Geoff Taylor compared illegal downloading to "a parasite".
The report released yesterday, called Digital Music Nation 2010, found 1.2 billion tracks were illegally downloaded in 2010.
Legal downloads are on the increase, with digital tracks now accounting for 24.5 per cent of recorded music revenue, up from 19.2 per cent last year.
However, the quantity of legal purchases is far behind the amount of music being downloaded illegally, with 370 million tracks paid for using legal download sites like Napster and iTunes.
The value of single tracks illegally downloaded this year alone amounted to 984m, the BPI pointed out. In September alone, it claimed some 6.1 million people in Britain were using sources of illegal content.
Mr Taylor warned that unless the UK Government took "decisive action" to remedy the problem, then Britain cannot expect to remain a "major global creative hub".
He said: "Digital music is now mainstream in the UK, with much to be proud of - nearly 70 legal services and a further increase in the numbers of digital singles and albums set to be sold online in 2010.
"Yet this growth is a fraction of what it ought to be. Illegal downloading continues to rise in the UK. It is a parasite that threatens to deprive a generation of talented young people of their chance to make a career in music, and is holding back investment in the fledgling digital entertainment sector.
"As the internet becomes central to many aspects of our lives, including how we access our entertainment, we must decide whether we can afford as a society to abandon ethical values we stand by elsewhere - that stealing is wrong; that creativity should be rewarded; that our culture defines who we are, and must be protected."
Mr Taylor added: "The creative industries employ two million people in the UK and are the fastest-growing sector of the economy.
"Urgent action is needed to protect those jobs and allow Britain to achieve its potential in the global digital market. 2011 must be the year that the government acts decisively to ensure the internet supports creativity and respects the basic rules of fair play we embrace as a nation."
The BPI predicted sales of digital singles could top 160 million this year, beating last year's record of 149.7 million.
It also expected around 21 million digital albums to be sold.
This year the Black Eyed Peas' I Gotta Feeling became the first single track download to sell more than a million copies.Sex on Fire by Kings of Leon has also sold more than a million copies.
To date, 19 albums have sold more than 100,000 digital copies, including two - Kings Of Leon's Only By The Night and Lady Gaga's The Fame - that have surpassed the quarter-million mark.
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