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View Full Version : P2P not hurting DVD, Blu-ray sales as revenues up from 2007



zatoicchi
16.07.08, 06:06
Consumers may be tightening their belts, but that reduction apparently hasn't affected DVD sales just yet. In fact, spending on DVDs and Blu-ray discs during the first half of 2008 showed a slight increase over the same period a year ago, according to data collected by Home Media Magazine. Spending on rentals rose even more, indicating that perhaps part of consumers' money-saving efforts involve cozying up to a movie at home for entertainment instead of heading out for a night on the town—or downloading from the Internet.
Home Media found that sales of DVDs and Blu-ray discs rose from $6.8 billion in early 2007 to $6.87 billion in the first half of this year—a modest increase of 1.1 percent. This number appears to coincide with "studio reports" saying that unit sales were also up 1.1 percent to 412.3 million discs in the first half of 2008, according to the Hollywood Reporter. Rentals increased by 2.6 percent, from $3.7 billion to $3.9 billion.

Analysts seem to think that these numbers also serve as proof that downloading—legal or illegal—is not hurting DVD sales as much as Doomsdayers would like to think. "The fact is, despite what many on Wall Street seem to think, there is very little digital downloading going on," Adams Media Research president Adams Media Research said. "We're talking about $118 million in 2007 spending, and about $254 million this year—so against a $24 billion packaged media market, it's really not making much of a dent at this point."

P2P not hurting DVD, Blu-ray sales as revenues up from 2007 (http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080714-p2p-not-hurting-dvd-blu-ray-sales-as-revenues-up-from-2007.html)

Aurion
16.07.08, 13:39
LOL a new technology is just borned & now they are trying to crack the crap out of it !! isnt that interesting,those guys are amazing IMO nothing stands in their way in terms of softwares

anon
16.07.08, 16:40
"Analysts seem to think that these numbers also serve as proof that downloading—legal or illegal—is not hurting DVD sales as much as Doomsdayers would like to think."

maybe some people download a movie and they find it so good they buy it legally to contribute to the authors :D i know people that do that with music CDs

zatoicchi
17.07.08, 03:22
were actually contributing to their salaries by means of p2p, they should be happy and joining us instead of fighting against p2p

anon
17.07.08, 18:15
they should be happy and joining us instead of fighting against p2p

yup, they should be happy you can download for example CD tracks with filesharing programs. if artists can't become famous when their music isn't downloaded for free, how do they expect to sell it? :biggrin:

Aurion
17.07.08, 18:19
I guess,lots of of those Digital Copies are already being shared inside a few huge trackers lately (such as RevTT,TB,cZone ..etc) so they should not expect to get protection for their new technology since sharers just love to seed/l33ch almost everything & anything to public