Monday, December 10, 2012

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Anti-Piracy Draconian Law in Japan, Music Sales Drop

With the pressures of ACTA (the global Anti-Piracy initiative) in place, a Draconian Anti-Piracy Law goes into effect and Music Sales subsequently plummet (more details at TechDirt).

According to Japan Today, downloading copyrighted music and video can be punishable by up to Two years in jail and a 2 million yen fine ($24,284 USD). Two years of trying your best not to drop the soap while losing the money for a new car... for downloading a stupid song. Scary? That's the point.


Unfortunately the music industry in Japan needs someone to blame for the decline in sales. No, they don't blame the crappy artists, high-priced CD's in a struggling economy, or their lack of initiative to increase revenue in other ways beside direct royalty from music purchases. They conveniently point their fingers at the evil RPG wielding internet pirates, who need to be observed every second because they are so "dangerous"... 


 Music Industry's Perception of Internet Pirates




The backfiring is obvious, this law has discouraged the already decline in interest in today's music. Many Japanese people state that when they do purchase music, it's from a foreign store because music at domestic stores are too expensive.

With that said, seeing that now the download button isn't available, and the music doesn't seem worth buying, people just don't bother anymore. Yet, the industry and lobbyists still fail to recognize this.



 Internet Pirate in Real Life


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